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  • Kids Buying Books in Droves -- Thanks, Harry!

    My mom dropped me off at high school for longer than I care to remember. Most days I'd just wait for her to drive away and then I'd skulk off campus and head downtown to a nearby coffee shop, where I could gulp down burned Sanka and do something I didn't feel quite comfortable doing in front of other kids: read.

    Thankfully, that's not the case today. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer reports that kids today are reading in record numbers -- helped by a growing market of young adult fiction and, possibly, the "afterglow" of Harry Potter.

    Read More...


  • Critics Denounce Pizza Hut's Reading Program

    Since 1985, Pizza Hut's reading program, Book It, has rewarded young readers and their families who participate in the program with pizza.  Anyone who has tasted Pizza Hut pizza would realize this might not be sufficient inducement, but everyone knows most kids aren't that picky.

    Over 925,000 elementary schools nationwide participate in the Pizza Hut program, but with increasing concerns over the link between child obesity and poor nutrition, the popularity of these programs is waning.

    Of course there really is no greater influence on childhood reading habits than parental example.  By reading to your kids and reading yourself, you may be making these silly corporate sponsored programs less necessary.  But for some kids, reading programs in schools whether sponsored by the Devil or God himself, may be the only exposure they have to good books.  And if they have to eat some bad food to get them to read books, than so be it.


  • Reading to Children Benefits the Whole Family, Especially Cranky Mommies

    Mir writes a great piece over at Maya's Mom discussing the importance of reading to your children, especially as they get older and life gets busier.  We have all heard by now the many advantages of reading aloud to children, including a bigger vocabulary and higher self-esteem, but Mir points to the particular balm reading provides the modern harried family.

    Reading is a single-modality activity.  You could technically talk on the phone and work on the computer while reading, I suppose, but reading encourages a focus and modulation of activity that can be soothing for the whole gang.  Curl up on the couch and try on those silly voices.  It really is fun and relaxing.

    Reading can be a better teacher than a parental lecture.  Picking books that cover tough issues is a clever way of getting the message across, without the glazed eyes.  I have a book about appropriate touch that suggests ways for young children to speak up if anyone makes them uncomfortable.  And it's a much more effective way to explain a tough topic to the five year olds, then diagrams and a baby-size mace bottle.

    But the best reason I've found to read to your kids is that there is a lovely mutual delight in sharing stories we knew as kids. I read "Ira Sleeps Over" (a late 70s gem) to my daughters the other day and we all laughed and connected and our 33 year age difference melted away. 



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