Important Dates
- Mon 11/11 - Veteran's Day Assembly 8:10-8:50am
- Wed 11/27 - Fri 11/29 - Thanksgiving Break (No school)
Reading doesn't just happen. It is a skill that must be nurtured from a child's earliest years. Once children know how to read, they still need gentle coaxing and support to reach their full potential as readers.
Here are a dozen tips for nurturing your growing readers:
* Read with your children at least once every day.
* Make sure they have plenty to read. Take them to the library regularly, and keep books and other reading materials in their reach.
* Notice what interests your child, then help find books about those things.
* Respect your child's choices. There's nothing wrong with series fiction if that's what keeps a young reader turning the pages.
* Praise your children's efforts and newly acquired skills.
* Help your child build a personal library. Children's books, new or used, make great gifts and appropriate rewards for reading. Designate a bookcase, shelf or box where your children can keep their books.
* Check up on your children's progress. Listen to them read aloud, read what they write and ask teachers how they're doing in school.
* Go places and do things with your children to build their background knowledge and vocabulary, and to give them a basis for understanding what they read.
* Tell stories. It's a fun way to teach values, pass on family history and build your children's listening and thinking skills.
* Be a reading role model. Let your children see you read, and share some interesting things with them that you have read about in books, newspapers or magazines.
* Continue reading aloud to older children even after they have learned to read by themselves.
* Encourage writing along with reading. Ask children to sign their artwork, add to your shopping list, take messages and make their own books and cards as gifts.
Adapted from Helping Your Children Become Better Readers Brochure from RIF/VISA
Here are a dozen tips for nurturing your growing readers:
* Read with your children at least once every day.
* Make sure they have plenty to read. Take them to the library regularly, and keep books and other reading materials in their reach.
* Notice what interests your child, then help find books about those things.
* Respect your child's choices. There's nothing wrong with series fiction if that's what keeps a young reader turning the pages.
* Praise your children's efforts and newly acquired skills.
* Help your child build a personal library. Children's books, new or used, make great gifts and appropriate rewards for reading. Designate a bookcase, shelf or box where your children can keep their books.
* Check up on your children's progress. Listen to them read aloud, read what they write and ask teachers how they're doing in school.
* Go places and do things with your children to build their background knowledge and vocabulary, and to give them a basis for understanding what they read.
* Tell stories. It's a fun way to teach values, pass on family history and build your children's listening and thinking skills.
* Be a reading role model. Let your children see you read, and share some interesting things with them that you have read about in books, newspapers or magazines.
* Continue reading aloud to older children even after they have learned to read by themselves.
* Encourage writing along with reading. Ask children to sign their artwork, add to your shopping list, take messages and make their own books and cards as gifts.
Adapted from Helping Your Children Become Better Readers Brochure from RIF/VISA