link to ClassBrain Home  Link to Teaching Tools  Link to Reading Room  link to ClassBrain Home  Link to Parents and Teachers Monthly Grb Bag  Link to My Brain  Link to School Matters  Link to Money  Link to Teaching Tools
Reading Room Home 
Articles
Columns
Columns - Political
Daily Smile
Glossaries
In the News & On The Net
Magazines
News
Parent & Teacher Posts
Parent Pamphlets
Reading Lists
Reviews - Books
Reviews - Books for Children
Reviews - Books for Teens
Stories
Technology in the Classroom
Virtual Books
 plug-in page link  link to ask classbrain

Last Updated: Aug 26th, 2008 - 22:00:22

Articles  


Help Your Kids Catch The Reading Bug This Summer
Part 1

By Kathy Sena
May 10, 2008, 21:01 PST



Help Your Kids Catch The Reading Bug This Summer - Part 1

Help Your Kids Catch the

Reading Bug This Summer

by Kathy Sena

 

Don't Lose it Use it

Make Summer Reading Fun

 

 

 


http://www.frontlinephonics.com

 

 

Summer was grand when I was a kid in rural Ohio: playing freeze tag with the neighborhood kids; picking blackberries with purple-stained fingers; finding tadpoles in the ditch in front of our house after a hard rain.

 

But, Thursday mornings were the best. The bookmobile would come rumbling down our street, filled with row after row of adventures and characters I couldn't wait to take home: Pippi Longstocking, Nancy Drew, The Cat in the Hat, I loved them all, and I knew I had all the lazy, homework-free time I wanted to lose myself in a grand, or just plain silly, story every day of summer vacation.

Don't Lose it Use it

That kind of free, unstructured time for reading is crucial for nurturing a child's reading skills during the summer, says reading expert Jim Trelease, author of The Read-Aloud Handbook (4th Ed.) (Penguin U.S.A.; 1995). It's true what they say about use it or lose it, he adds "Reading skills, if they're not used, do drop off by summer's end."

 

Fortunately, it's not hard to keep a child's vocabulary, reading skills and love of reading flourishing during summer vacation. Here are some tips from the experts: 

Make Summer Reading Fun

Every child should read a minimum of six books, or have six books read to him, during the summer, Trelease says.  Judith Krantz or Tom Clancy!

 

Summer reading shouldn't be an extension of school, says Trelease. It's OK to read a little junk during the summer. He remembers one of the best parts of his own summer reading as a child. "I chose the book," he says.  It gave me a sense of ownership.

 

Ask the children's librarian at your local library for a list of age-appropriate books, suggests Lisa Falk, a children's librarian for the Los Angeles Public Library. Many libraries also provide information or workshops on reading aloud to your child, she adds.     More Tips from the Experts4

 

 




© Copyright 2008 by Classbrain.com

Top of Page


Google

Search ClassBrain
Search WWW

DICTIONARY


Articles
Latest Headlines
Happy Holidays
Faith Under Pressure:- The Miracle Marine
A Relief Worker's Look at Hurricane Gustav
Head Start Double Whammy
California Senate Votes to End Communist Prohibition
Help Your Kids Catch The Reading Bug This Summer
Part 1
Help Your Kids Catch The Reading Bug This Summer
Part 2
Help Your Kids Catch The Reading Bug This Summer
Part 3
Paper and Scissors And Glue Oh My!
Seven Signals to School Success
Teach Respect for Copyright in Your Classroom
The Value of Life
Mapping Out Your Back-to-School Plan
Books for Soldiers
College-Educated, Young Adults Consider 'Place' First When Moving
Put Reading First -- Parent Guide
How Can I Help My Child
Be Ready to Read and Ready to Learn?
An Insider’s Look at Immigration from Steven Camarota
The True Cost of Government-Sponsored Early Childhood Education and Care
The Five Essential Components of Reading