Strategies to Encourage Your Child to Read
- Start with 15 minutes a day and build. It takes time for readers to build up stamina to read for longer periods of time. Start with just 15 minutes, pick a time of day when your child isn’t too tired, and provide a quiet, distraction-free setting. Eventually, aim for at least 30 minutes per day.
- Have your child read aloud to you. Beginning readers may not be interested in reading alone, but will be engaged if they can read to a loved one.
- Provide incentives. Is your child a reluctant reader? Plan a treat once they do their daily reading, like some one-on-one time playing with a favorite toy.
- Read in different settings. Read outdoors, at the beach, in the front yard, on a park bench.
- Join a summer reading program or “challenge.” Check out your local library, museums or your child’s school website to see if they have any reading challenges set up for the summer. Or create your family’s own game or contest by logging the books you read, and planning a reward after each reader completes a certain number of books.
- Connect your child’s reading to family outings. Plan a day trip inspired by a favorite book. If you take your kids to the beach, read a book about the ocean later that day. If you go to a science museum with an exhibit on dinosaurs, find a book about that.
- Establish reading as part of a daily routine and family tradition. Set a time and place during the day when all members of the household gather to read. Everyone can read their own book, or take turns reading a shared book aloud. Let young children turn pages or act out the story. For older kids, choose a book as a family and hold book club discussions, a great way to develop literacy and thinking skills.
- Be a reading role model. Let your child see you reading any type of print, from newspapers to magazines to letters to books – not just on a screen or electronic device. Keep lots of reading material around the house, and make reading part of vacation and leisure time too.
The key? Fit in a little bit of reading every day, and find ways to keep your child engaged in the material. What your child is actually reading matters less than their enthusiasm for it. The more they’re interested, the more closely they’ll read. That will build their reading skills, and set them up for a lifelong love of books.
For book recommendations, free e-books and other reading resources, visit reachoutandread.org – there’s even a free e-book to help kids understand germs!
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