A Collection of Favorite Books Is a Great Incentive for Kids to Read
Helping your child develop his own collection of favorite books is a great way to encourage the habit of reading.
Helping your child develop his own collection of favorite books is a great way to encourage the habit of reading. While the many books your child gets to read in school or the local library are wonderful resources, nothing beats finding your kid curled up in a corner, entertaining himself with a much beloved book of his own.
Adults generally read a book once or perhaps twice if it's a really compelling book. Not so with kids; a child will read a favorite book, ten, twenty, or more times, becoming so familiar with the content that he can often quote large passages from the book. Take the Harry Potter books, for instance: kids have devoured the series, and can tell you every detail of every character and plot twist, and can tell you, with lots of energy and disapproval, how at least one of the movies departed from the original book.
Kids who read favorite books many times over are not only developing good reading habits, they are working to deepen their understanding of the content of each book. They are developing critical reading skills as they notice details and nuances in the second, third, or fourth reading that they may not have noticed in the first. And they are preparing themselves for the more demanding curriculum of upper grade levels, where a passage from a book may require more than one reading in order to properly absorb sometimes complex material.
Providing your child with a selection of fiction and nonfiction books covering his favorite subjects is perhaps the best thing you can do to keep him reading and to prepare him for future success in school and beyond.
Adults generally read a book once or perhaps twice if it's a really compelling book. Not so with kids; a child will read a favorite book, ten, twenty, or more times, becoming so familiar with the content that he can often quote large passages from the book. Take the Harry Potter books, for instance: kids have devoured the series, and can tell you every detail of every character and plot twist, and can tell you, with lots of energy and disapproval, how at least one of the movies departed from the original book.
Kids who read favorite books many times over are not only developing good reading habits, they are working to deepen their understanding of the content of each book. They are developing critical reading skills as they notice details and nuances in the second, third, or fourth reading that they may not have noticed in the first. And they are preparing themselves for the more demanding curriculum of upper grade levels, where a passage from a book may require more than one reading in order to properly absorb sometimes complex material.
Providing your child with a selection of fiction and nonfiction books covering his favorite subjects is perhaps the best thing you can do to keep him reading and to prepare him for future success in school and beyond.

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- Ages and Stages of Child Development
- The Five Keys to Infant and Child Development
- Child Development Stages
- Questionnaire Helps Parents Assess Child Development, Timing Training Needs
- Do You Have a Budding Specialist on Your Hands? Give Her the Resources She Needs
- Inspirational Short Stories for Children
- Popularity at School
- Children’s Museums: The Greatest Children’s Learning Institutions in the World
- Use Children's Books to Encourage Kids to Read
- Use Jigsaw Puzzles to Help Your Young Child Learn to Read
- Development of Movements and its importance in the Life of a Child
- Why Cranium Fort Is An Educational Toy
- 7 Tips To Ensure That Your Only Child Develops Into A Well Rounded Adult
- The Value Of Jigsaw Puzzles For Very Young Children
- Developmental Stages – Is Your Baby on Track
- Hand-eye coordination and visual discrimination key to literacy
- Success Through The Eyes Of A Child




