Your child’s teacher and school librarian always encourage reading books at home. Keep reading below or click here to download a handout on supporting your child’s language when reading and exploring books and handouts for other activities.
WHY is reading and exploring books so important for promoting language and literacy development?
- Children need to hear many words often. Reading to your child often exposes them to more words and builds his/her vocabulary.
- Children learn words when they are interested. Books motivate children to communicate and, when parents respond to what the child is interested in, it helps the child learn new words.
- Reading builds vocabulary and meaning. Children learn what words mean when parents read with them and explain what new words mean while pointing to the pictures.
- Vocabulary and grammar are learned together. Children need to hear new words in grammatically correct sentences in order to learn language efficiently. Reading books with your child exposes them to new words used in grammatical sentences.
- Positive, extended conversations support cognitive and social development. When parents read with their child this promotes a positive interaction and shared conversation.
You can support your child’s language skills when playing inside on rainy days, or whenever your child needs to take a movement or brain break to play!
While keeping a safe physical distance from others, you can support your child’s language skills when playing outside.
During this unprecented time of social distancing, many of us are eating at home with our families more than before. Cooking together is a wonderful way to work on language goals with your child! Narrate as you plan and cook together. This provides a language model for your child and is a great way to introduce new vocabulary and grammar. For example, “First I am mixing in the eggs, then I will mix in the milk”. Remember to speak in the first person instead of referring to yourself as Mommy/Daddy (e.g., use “I am mixing in the eggs.” instead of “Mommy is mixing in the eggs.”). Meals are also a great time to sit and practice language in a relaxed way. 