Reading with your children…

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Research shows that reading extends vocabulary which in turn can improve achievement in all curriculum subjects, not just English! With this in mind, it is important that children read every night after school. This only needs to be for approx. 10-15 minutes but has huge benefits. Please ensure you sign your child’s reading record to demonstrate that this is being done.

Over the holidays try to help with your child’s education by reading to and hearing your child read.

Ten Tips on Hearing Your Child Read

1. Children who read often and widely get better at it.

Practice makes perfect in almost everything we do and reading is no different from anything
else!

2. Reading exercises our brains.

Reading is a much more complex task for the human brain than, say, watching TV is.
Reading strengthens children’s brain connections and actually builds new connections.

3. Reading improves concentration.

Children have to sit still and quietly so they can focus on the story when they’re reading. If
they read regularly, they develop the ability to do this for longer periods. This in turn helps
their learning in school.

4. Reading teaches children about the world around them.

Through reading, children learn about people, places and events outside their own
experience. They are exposed to ways of life, ideas and beliefs about the world which may
be different from those which surround them. This learning is important for its own sake;
however it also builds a store of background knowledge which helps younger children learn
to read confidently and well.

5. Reading improves a child’s vocabulary and leads to more highly-developed language
skills.

This is because children learn new words as they read but also because they unconsciously
absorb information as they read about things. For example, like how to structure sentences
and how to use words and language effectively. All of this knowledge also feeds into their
writing.

6. Reading develops a child’s imagination.

This is because when we read our brains translate the descriptions we read about people,
places and things into pictures. When we’re engaged in a story, we’re also imagining how
the characters are feeling. We use our own experiences to imagine how we would feel in
the same situation.

7. Reading helps children develop empathy.

Children begin to identify with the characters they are reading about and therefore start to
understand how those characters are feeling.

8. Children who read do better at school.

Children don’t just do better in subjects like reading, English and History. Research has
shown that they do better in all subjects… and they do better all the way through school.

9. Reading is a great form of entertainment.

A book (or a comic) doesn’t take up much space in a bag. Your child can take it anywhere
and never be lonely or bored. They can read while travelling in a car, waiting in a queue,
sitting in the doctor’s waiting room.

10. Reading relaxes the body and calms the mind.

This is an important point because these days we all seem to have forgotten how to relax
and especially how to be silent. The constant movement, flashing lights and noise which
bombard children’s senses when watching TV, looking at a computer or playing an
electronic game are actually quite stressful for their brains. When children read it has a very
calming effect since the black print on a white page is much less stressful for their eyes and brain.

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