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Reading Every Day 10 Things to Do with Young Children Chrysler Corp. and Scholastic Inc. PTA Today March/April 1995 Adapted from November 1994 Reading Together. Make It a Family Tradition! family guide, produced by Chrysler Corp. and Scholastic Inc., in cooperation with American Federation of Teachers and the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development. (365 wc) Reading Every Day You say you don't have the time to read to your children every day? Here are 10 things you can do with your young children that will provide them with 15 minutes of your time for daily family reading. 1. License to read. On car trips, make it a game to point out and read vanity plates, license plates from different states, billboards, and interesting road signs. 2. Better than TV. Read a good action story or tale of adventure to replace an evening TV program 3. Look and listen. Too tired to read aloud? By listening to a book on tape and turning the book pages with your children, you'll still be reading with them. 4. Labels, labels, labels. Label the objects in your children's room as they learn to name them. Add more labeled items from time to time. 5. Pack a snack, pack a book. When you're going someplace with your child where there might be a long wait, bring along a bag of favorite books. 6. Recipe for reading ingredients. Jot down a favorite recipe on an index card, then read the ingredients together with your child as you both prepare a meal. 7. Shop and read. Read aloud signs and labels in the supermarket. Putting away groceries in another great opportunity; even pre-readers can sort cans and boxes by colors and pictures. 8. Phone home. Can't get away from the office? Keep a few children's books at work, and instead of a coffee beak, call home and use this opportunity to read to your child. 9. Reading pockets. Slip fun reading material into your pockets to bring home to your child a story or comic strip, a greeting card, even a fortune cookie from lunch. Let your child know when there's something to share in your reading pocket. 10. A little longer? When your child asks to stay up a little longer, say yes, and make it a 15-minute family reading opportunity. |
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