Do you and your children spend time enjoying storybooks together? And, do they also enjoy looking at or reading books on their own? When children spend time in these ways with books, they are learning to be readers!
Learning to read is a journey of discovery. As you travel through the world of storybooks with your children, you’ll uncover different treasures and pleasure along the way. You might notice that your child, who used to run off when you tried to read to him, now has a favourite picture book which he brings to you to read − over and over again! Or maybe you’re surprised the first time that your older child sits down with her younger brother and pretends to read to him from a familiar picture book.
If you read regularly with your children, you will notice that their book habits change over time. Here are some of the “signposts” that point out a successful reading journey.
So, how do you know when your children are “really reading” rather than pretending to read? When you go on a journey, you are not called a “traveller” only when you reach the destination. Learning to read is exactly the same. It is a journey and at every stage of that journey your children are behaving as readers, even when it seems that all they are doing is looking at the pictures and telling their own story!
Reading to your children – even after they have learnt to read for themselves – is the best and easiest way to help your children become readers. Make reading a daily habit and celebrate each attempt your children make on the journey to reading independence.
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