English, asked by yashima18, 11 months ago

please help me in article writing

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yashima18: anyone to help?

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Answered by hannah02
1
Research shows that reading to children and discussing the book as you read is the single best way to increase your child’s IQ and instill a love of reading.

Does your child read every day, not because it’s assigned, but just for fun? Some kids do, and those are the kids who do better academically, at every step of the way. School performance correlates more directly with children's reading scores than any other single indicator. Children who choose to read independently become better readers, score higher on achievement tests in all subject areas, and have greater content knowledge than those who don't.*

Most parents buy board books for their babies and say they hope they'll love reading. And yet, by middle school, most kids stop reading books that aren't assigned in school. In the USA, an alarming 65 percent of fourth graders in public school were reading below the proficient level in 2015 ( Study by Annie E. Casey Foundation

What happens? The habit of reading never really gets ingrained in childhood. Our kids love leafing through books as toddlers, looking at the pictures. They may even enjoy reading as early elementary schoolers. But reading is hard work, and life offers so many other ways to entertain themselves that early reading often seems more like work than play. They never get to that delicious place where reading a good book is more fun than almost anything.


1. Read to your child from the earliest age.

 

2. Begin visiting the library regularly


3. Don't push your child to learn to read.
 

4. Read to your child as often as possible
 

5. Don't stop reading to him once he learns to read.


6. Ritualize daily reading time.



7. Help her tackle the next level.



8. Help him improve his reading by alternating pages with him

...

9. Try smart comics for reluctant readers.

Some kids get a terrific jump start from comics, which are less intimidating to them than chapter books. Bill Watterson’s Calvin and Hobbes and the Tin Tin series, for instance, are kid pleasers with sophisticated vocabulary and concepts.

10. Never stop reading to her.

I know she can read anything herself now. But why give up such an important time to connect with each other emotionally? Why give up the chance to read books that trigger good discussions about values and choices and hardships and hope? Don’t stop till she fires you. My fourteen year old can read physics books I can't fathom, but he still lets me read history or politics to him occasionally. The best part for both of us is then talking about what we've read.

11. Read yourself.

Role model. If they don't see you read, why should they? Discuss what you're all reading at the dinner table. Institutionalize family reading time, when a parent reads to the whole family. As kids get older, they can take over the role of reader, or the book can be passed around the circle.

12. Limit technology.

There is no way a book can compete with TV or computer. Most kids, given the choice, just won't choose the book often enough to make it a habit. Before you know it, they'll have developed other habits for relaxing, and reading will be something other people do. Limiting or even banning screen usage until reading is well-established may be the most important thing you can do to encourage reading

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