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This mini-doc is free, extracted from the author’s considerable reservoir of knowledge, and does not contain any affiliate links. Share it with anyone else whose children may benefit from these ideas, as long as you give complete credit to the author – Linda Ogier of Heartfire At Home under the terms of the Creative Attribution 3.0 License.
If you’ve been around my blog Heartfire At Home for any amount of time you know how crazy I am about books. And, particularly how crazy I am about books as part of the tapestry of a true home and as a grounding for any child. For me, if a house is to be a home for a child…. It MUST have books in it (and not just for decoration purposes!), plus a comfy place to become immersed in those books. As you know, I’m mad about interior design and how we can make it more holistic and connected to our lives. I blog joyfully about this concept, and spend many, many hours helping those in my ‘real’ offline world to do just that in many ways. What you may not know however, is I’ve also been a practicing primary school teacher as well for over 24 years (four days a week still), and I’m specifically trained (an extra year on top of my 4 year Bachelor Degree) in the area of reading. So, I know a tad about it. Here then, are 30 ideas (plus a few more, and then one big one), to help your child become a true lover of books. Most of these can be used with picture story books for younger school age children, or longer chapter books.
Read on…..
30 WAYS TO HELP YOUR CHILD BECOME A SERIOUS BOOK LOVER and A GREAT READER!
1. Read TO them, particularly books that are too hard for them at the moment. The only way they’ll get to hear amazing literature that’s a little bit hard for them is if someone (YOU) reads it to them. 2. Read WITH them. If you read along together, they can model their expression and phrasing on yours. Great practice for them! 3. Listen to them read. And then, talk to them about what they’ve read. 4. Praise them when they read well or figure out an unknown word. 5. Pause – don’t jump in immediately if they get stuck - give them a chance to figure it out (around 10 to 20 seconds). 6. Prompt – if they’re still stuck after you’ve paused appropriately, give them a prompt (a clue), or just tell them the word. You don’t want to lose the ‘flow’ of the story or else they’ll forget what they’re reading about and enjoyment will fade. 7. Take turns reading parts of a page, or a page each. 8. Read your own books sitting next to each other, and then share your fave bits. 9. Read your own books sitting back to back… human touch is a bonding experience… 10. Have poetry reading sessions… find some funny poems and stand up and read them aloud to each other! 11. Find some books with children’s plays in them and have a go at practicing and performing them!
12. Get them to write their own scripts for a play and then perform them. 13. Ask interesting questions about the characters in the story What’s the worst thing that’s happened to your favorite character in the book? The best thing? Why do they think that? How do they feel about…..? What would you do if you were in their place? 14. At the end of a page or chapter ask them to predict what will happen next in the story. High five if you were right! 15. Keep a chart with a gold sticker or star for every book read. When you get to a pre-determined limit (5, 10, 20), go for a trip to the bookstore and buy a favorite book. 16. Get out your scrapbooking materials and make up a scrapbook page representing a character, a place, an object or an emotion from a favorite story.
17. Draw a map of all the places in the story. Look at maps from The Hobbit and Narnia for inspiration.
18. Get out paints, textas, pens, charcoal, all sorts of drawing materials and make a picture about the story/book. Collage is great too!
19. Use sticky notes (kids LOVE them) to mark up favorite pages in a story or book. Use these to refer to when looking for ideas to draw/write/scrapbook about. 20. Use sticky notes to stick on pages with unknown words that you could look up later together. 21. Use sticky notes to stick on pages in non-fiction books that provoke questions they would like answered, then Google more info later on. 22. Use the interest generated in the last idea to create a mini project or book on their topic of interest. 23. Use a program like audioboo to get the children reading aloud on to the computer and creating podcasts of their reading to hear what they sound like!
24. Get them to create a voki of their favorite character from a story and make them say something appropriate for that character…. Make several vokis from the same book, each about a different character. 25. Let them create, build, and make ‘stuff’ that relates to a book…. a castle out of boxes, a magic hideaway in the garden, a fairy ring to run around, an animal out of clay or plasticine.
26. Create a special place in your home that gives reading importance. Gorgeous seating, comfy cushions, a bookshelf within reach. Make reading a priority. 27. Let them make books themselves. Kids LOVE this! Give them paper, a stapler, pens, colored pencils… whatever, and let them create their own book. Don’t be the ‘spelling police’ or go over the top trying to make it perfect… remember, you’re trying to develop a LOVE of books. Spelling is a whole different lesson! 28. Give them book plates to paste/stick inside the covers of all their own books to make them more special. Etsy has some great sellers for this. Just search for ’book plates’.
29. Let them have a torch to read for a few minutes (10? 20?) in bed at night and make it a little secretive, special, just for them experience. They will never forget this!
And finally…. 30. Let them read to their younger/older siblings. This makes them feel special and like an expert… especially if they’re reading a book that’s really easy for them to a younger brother or sister and talking about the book with them, explaining the pictures to them etc.
NOW, keep reading for some extra tips and one BIG idea at the very end!
Some Entertaining Extras: 1. Whatever you do‌. Make it fun! Go for picnics and take a book each and have a picnic read-a-thon. 2. Sit under a shady tree on a hot day, or (horror), climb one together and read a book up there (a-m-a-z-i-n-g). 3. Make a tree-house with shelves for special books. 4. Pitch a tent out in the back yard and read by torchlight. 5. Take a family photo with everyone peeking over their favorite opened book and blow it up and put it on the wall near your special reading corner or place. (LOVE it!) 6. Make trips to the library together‌ stop and have afternoon tea somewhere... make it as special as possible. 7. Read a book and then go to see the movie or borrow a DVD of the same book and compare them. 8. Get creative in any way you can think of! Making books a part of special memories will create a love for books and reading that will be life-long.
And, one more thing for those children who already love their books and for whom you’d like to take things a little further! You know how some grown-ups get together for a ‘book club’ where they each read the same book and then get together on a regular basis to discuss the book? Well…. If your child is up to reading reasonably lengthy chapter books (like Harry Potter, The Narnia series, The Hobbit, The Secret Garden etc), there’s no reason you can’t do the same with a bunch of interested children! This could be 3 to 5 kids all with the same book, and each week (or whenever they meet) they could be assigned 3 or 4 chapters (or whatever suits), and could meet up at a parent's house to read out their favourite bits, talk about any words/parts they may not have understood, discuss what the characters are thinking or doing, and to guess/predict what they think is going to happen in the next few chapters. It could only take 30 mins or so, they could have a yummy afternoon snack, and then they could have a quick play together and be picked up by their parents. If it was your own child plus 3 more, you could fit them all in one car, and the parents could take turns picking them up from school on the designated day each week. So, you'd only have to go and pick them up from wherever they were. Good way to meet the other parents (or chat more with them), and also a good way for parents to get involved in a different way as the parent whose home it was at would have to 'lead' the discussion somewhat. You could even have your own adult book group for half an hour after theirs while they played if you were all feeling really industrious! Then they'd get to see parents discussing books too (even though they'd be playing, they'd notice). They may even choose to sit in! Although you'd have to pick child friendly books - lol. So in short..... 1. 2. 3. 4.
3 to 5 kids with same book. Get together once a week (or fortnight etc) for 30 mins of ‘book time’. See if what they predicted the week before came true (see part 7 below). Share their favourite part.
5. Share unknown words, bits they weren't sure of, or interesting thoughts they may have about a happening or character (get them to make a note of these while they're reading during the week, or use little post it notes to stick in the books). 6. Ask if there's anything they'd like to know more about and research. For instance, they might be reading a fairytale that has dragons in it, and might like to 'research' dragons and do a little project on them to bring and share the next week. Different kids would be interested in different things. 7. Ask them to predict what they think will happen next (write these down in a little 'book club journal'). The steps above are based very loosely on the targeted group reading model we shift to in the grade 3/4 areas in our schools in Australia, and are fabulous for those children who are really up to getting more deeply involved in what they’re reading.
Thanks so much for taking the time to get serious about helping your children LOVE books. I hope my suggestions have given you something new to try or to think about including in your family time! And remember‌
Linda. xox Heartfire At Home Blog