The Importance of Reading Aloud by Emily Cook
Currclick.com
I cannot stress enough how important reading aloud to your children
is. Educationally speaking, it may be one of the most important things
you do for them. Most parents can find the time to read a picture book
or two with their infants and toddlers. But once a child learns to read,
that snuggly read aloud time usually ends. I think it’s actually more
important to continue that read aloud time well into their school years.
But my child is fully capable of reading their own books. Why should I read aloud to him?
There are a number of reasons, but here is what I consider the top 5:
5. Reading aloud creates a family bond, especially if there are other siblings listening as well.
Your children will fondly look back on their memories of listening to
you read aloud, giggle over how you did “all the voices,” and fondly
recall favorites stories heard at your knee. They’ll play games of
pretend based on the stories you read to them, imagining themselves in
Narnia, adventuring along the Mississippi with Tom Sawyer, or playing
with Pooh Bear and Piglet in the Hundred Acre Wood. Just because a book
is considered “children’s” literature, doesn’t mean it’s childish. Many
of my favorite books are written for children! A good story is a good
story, and you will find that you enjoy many great books just as much
(if not more!) than the kids. Some of my favorite memories are of
reading aloud to my children. I recently finished reading The Hobbit
aloud with my twins, and my oldest daughter kept trying to listen in as
she did her school work in the other room. I read it aloud to her a few
years ago, and it is still one of her all time favorite stories. I
can’t wait until my youngest is old enough so I can help her discover
Middle Earth and all of its charms.
4. Reading aloud will help to stimulate their imagination.
When you read aloud, you don’t have to choose books at any particular
reading level. So while you daughter is just getting comfortable with
easy chapter books, you can read books far above her level to her. You
can expose them to fantasy worlds full of talking animals, knights and
battles, distant countries… the literary world is open to you!
Literature is peopled with characters that your children will want to
emulate and filled with places they’ll want to pretend. Poetry will fill
their minds with beautiful language and spark their own creativity with
words and stories.
3. Literature will expose them to difficult ideas and situations in a safe way.
Life is full of hard truths, and what better way to learn of them
than from a beautifully written story read to them by someone they love
and trust? Charlotte’s Web shows that sometimes, a beloved friend dies,
not from any terrible illness or violent act, but simply because it is a
part of life. Literature will also build empathy – they’ll put
themselves in the characters place, wondering how they would react in
the same situation.
2. Reading aloud to your children can increase their vocabulary.
Again, because you aren’t limited to choosing books within their
reading level, you can expose them to a world of beautiful language.
This will also help build their thinking skills – rather than interrupt
the story to ask about a particular word, they’ll be more apt to use
context clues to try and figure it out themselves.
1. If you start when they are very young, reading to your children daily will build their attention span.
A child who’s been read to his whole life will be able to concentrate
and pay attention to something for far longer than a child who spends
all of his time playing video games or watching television.
But most importantly, reading to your children will give them a love
of literature. I mourn for the children who grow up thinking Winnie the
Pooh is just a brightly colored cartoon character, who never get to meet
Charlotte and Wilbur, Sara Crewe, Charlie Bucket and Tom Sawyer.
Reading aloud will give them a respect for the written word, introduce
them to the wide world and the great conversation and build their
cultural literacy. It will give them a legacy of great literature to
pass on to their own children.
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