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Reading Tips

Tips for reading to young, school-age children

Your child has started school, but he still needs you to read to him at home. Your child will do 
better in school, and you'll enjoy the time spent together.
  
Here are helpful tips for reading to and with young children in school, kindergarten through 
third grade:

Keep reading to your child even when he can read. Read books that are too difficult or long for 
him to read alone.
  
Try reading books with chapters and talk about what is happening in the story. Encourage your 
child to make predictions about what will happen next, and connect characters or events to 
those in other books and stories.

Talk with your child about reading preferences that are beginning to develop. Ask whether she 
likes adventure stories, mysteries, science fiction, animal stories, or stories about other 
children. Encourage her to explain the reasons for preferences.

Talk with your child about favorite authors and help him find additional books by those authors.

Take turns reading a story with your child. Don't interrupt to correct mistakes that do not 
change the meaning.

Talk about the meaning of new words and ideas introduced in books. Help your child think of 
examples of new concepts.

Talk with your child about stories using the notions of the beginning, middle, and end of the 
story to organize thinking and discussion.

Ask your child to tell why a character might have taken a specific action. Ask for information 
from the story to support her answer.

Enjoy yourself and have fun. The most important thing you can do to help your child become a 
successful reader is communicate that reading is valuable and enjoyable.

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Last Modified: Thursday August 07 2008
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