Fifty Ways to Keep Your Kids Reading All Summer By Gwynne Spencer Web Exclusive
If you'd like to encourage your kids to read more (and watch less) this summer,
here you will find half a hundred easy ideas. Reading isn't the most important
thing, it's the ONLY thing!
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1. Go to the library every single week and give the kids an hour to find
a book they want to take home. Don't make them commit to reading it, just
taking it home. Afterward, go get an ice cream cone. Chances are they'll read
while they eat. Problem licked.
2. Go to a bookstore once a month and let each child buy one book. As their
personal library grows, so will their love of books and owning them. When
you own something, it takes root in your daily life.
3. Turn off the TV for at least two hours a day. Or limit the watching
to two hours a day. The typical kid watches 20-30 hours of TV a week! It won't
kill them (or you) to turn the thing off.
4. Read out loud to your kids, no matter how old they are, unless they
have moved out of the house and taken their furniture with them.
5. Read aloud at every meal
6. Keep a book in the car. Read out loud when you are waiting at soccer
games, sitting in the drive-through, or just stuck in the car.
7. Keep a list on the refrigerator of books the kids have read this year.
If they want to add a comment, so much the better.
8. Don't censor what kids read (within reason). If they're on a Harry Potter
jag, sooner or later they'll run out of books and move on to something else.
9. Build kids listening stamina by reading in short bursts (three minutes)
and building up gradually until you get to at least thirty minutes.
10. Don't test kids on what they read (like Accelerated reader). Share
it, yes, but don't give them the third degree or they'll quit reading altogether.
11. Don't have a fit if they abandon a book in the middle. They may go
back to it, or it may not be the right size, or it may be emotionally more
than they can handle right now.
12. Ask the kids to read aloud to you while you drive, especially on long
road trips.
13. Keep a reading journal that helps kids remember books. Don't ask them
to do this on their own, do it for them.
14. Listen to tapes of favorite books or books they'd never be able to
read on their own. Highly recommended are the tapes from Listening Library,
with hundreds of titles to choose from.
15. Help start a reading club for three other kids (plus yours) who are
reading similar books. Treat them to pizza while they talk about the books.
Take them on trips to the bookstore. Help them write to the author.
16. Encourage kids to write to their favorite authors and learn letter
writing skills as well as acquaintance with real live authors. Most can be
found on the internet, or ask your library to look them up in Something About
the Author series.
17. Set a good example and read every day yourself.
18. Read picture books to your big kids, not just the little ones. Try
Love You Forever by Robert Munsch or The Day My Dogs Became Guys by Merrill
Markoe.
19. Encourage kids to try their hand at illustration using examples like
Jan Brett and Tomie de Paola.
20. Make reading fashionable every chance you get.
21. Make sure Dad reads to kids too. Real men may not ask for directions,
but they do read aloud.
22. Strategically place dictionaries, word books, joke books and other "light
reading" in the bathroom.
23. Casually pile a large stack of books in front of the TV every day.
24. Rotate different titles to the top of the microwave so kids will read
while they wait for the popcorn.
25. Read nonfiction aloud to your kids when they are interested in a topic
like bears or earthquakes or bombs. Some kids hate fiction and think of it
as lies but may love nonfiction.
26. Take your kids to meet real live authors and illustrators at bookstores,
libraries.
27. Read the book and THEN rent the video. Gary Paulsen's Hatchet, Wilson
Rawls' Where the Red Fern Grows, Louis Sachar's Holes, Natalie Babbitt's Tuck
Everlasting are just a few examples.
28. Don't make kids look up hard words in the dictionary; tell them a synonym
and keep going.
29. Reward reading with reading. When kids have read ten books, go for
a field trip to the bookstore, not pizza.
30. Read them junk, too. Joke books, riddles, cartoons all count.
31. Read them short little stories like One Minute Mysteries, Encyclopedia
Brown stories or short-stories.
32. Read funny stuff that they might have missed because it didn't get
published when they were reading in that stage. Junie B. Jones series is too
good for anybody to miss, and just because a kid is ten doesn't mean they
won't love it!
33. Talk about books over dinner, the way grownups do. You may find out
that your kid is in love with Marguerite Henry books or biographies, and you
might never have known it because they were busy doing the required reading
for school.
34. Don't get sucked into page-count wars with teachers. Just because a
book doesn't have a certain minimum number of pages doesn't have anything
to do with its literary merit.
35. Read Sue Denim's The Dumb Bunnies series before you go on trips and
then write (and illustrate) your own Dumb Bunnies books.
36. Before you go on a long road trip, read Marissa Moss' Amelia books
and then buy your kids composition books, colored pencils, Scotch tape, and
write every day while you rest up from the day's travels.
37. Keep a book in your backpack or purse of word puzzles, jokes, little
stories, riddles. You never know when you'll need it.
38. Take books along when you go camping. Nothing better than reading while
the rain pours down on the tent.
39. Provide comfy places for kids to read.
40. Cook with kids using books as the basis (see Recipes for Reading for
ideas of snacks that come from picture books like Rotten Ralph's Kitty Litter
Cake)
41. Let kids draw while you read to them
42. Read outdoors when the opportunity arises
43. Share books while kids sip lemonade on a hot summer day.
44. Don't read too fast; give the listeners places to enter into the material
through pauses and spaces.
45. Help kids compare and connect books and movies. How is Harry Potter
like Luke Skywalker? Is there any similarity between Heidi and Misty of Chincoteague?
46. On a big wall map of the United States, help them add a push-pin to
show where each book takes place. You're teaching geography and literature
together!
47. Invite other kids to join you on your jaunts to the library and bookstore.
48. Start a mother-daughter reading club or a mother-son reading adventure
society to bring the world of books alive in a group of people.
49. Do art projects based on books. For inspiration, start with The Rainbow
Goblins by Ul de Rico, and learn how to create similar color tableaux. Explore
different media.
50. Go to library storytimes. If your kids are "too old" to sit
and listen, have them volunteer to help work with younger children.
If you have an idea that ought to be added to this list, you can send it
and get a free bumper sticker: What Did You Read To Your Kid Today?
Gwynne Spencer is author of What's Cooking in Children's Literature and Have
Talent Will Travel: Authors, Illustrators and Storytellers Directories. Contact
her at P O Box 121, Mancos, CO 81328 or pengwynnes@aol.com