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Read! Read! Read!
The end of the year is near. If you are interested in summer school, please
contact your son or daughter's case manager regarding applications and paper
work. With summer time approaching so quickly, here are some tips on how to
keep your child reading over the summer. Parents should remember that children
need free time in the summer to relax and enjoy the pleasures of childhood. So
summer reading should be fun. Following are a few tips to make reading
enjoyable for your children this summer:
- Read
aloud together with your child every day. Make it fun by reading outdoors on
the front steps, patio, at the beach or park. Also, let your children read to
you. For younger children, point out the relationship between words and sounds
- Set
a good example! Parents must be willing to model behavior for their children.
Keep lots of reading material around the house. Turn off the TV and have each
person read his or her book, including mom and dad.
- Read
the same book your child is reading and discuss it. This is the way to develop
habits of the mind and build capacity for thought and insight.
- Let
kids choose what they want to read, and don't turn your nose up at popular
fiction. It will only discourage the reading habit.
- Buy
books on tape, especially for a child with a learning disability. Listen to
them in the car, or turn off the TV and have the family listen to them
together.
- Take
your children to the library regularly. Most libraries sponsor summer reading
clubs with easy-to-reach goals for preschool and school-age children. Check the
library calendar for special summer reading activities and events. Libraries
also provide age appropriate lists for summer reading.
- Subscribe, in your
child's name, to magazines like Sports Illustrated for Kids, Highlights for
Children, or National Geographic World. Encourage older children to read the
newspaper and current events magazines, to keep up the reading habit over the
summer and develop vocabulary. Ask them what they think about what they've
read, and listen to what they say.
- Ease disappointment
over summer separation from a favorite school friend by encouraging them to
become pen pals. Present both children with postcards or envelopes that are
already addressed and stamped. If both children have access to the Internet,
email is another option.
- Make trips a way to
encourage reading by reading aloud traffic signs, billboards, notices. Show
your children how to read a map, and once you are on the road, let them take
turns being the navigator.
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