English, asked by CheeseCakeMouse, 7 days ago

pls. write an essay about 'reading creates opportunities in the midst of pandemic'

ps. i really need it now​

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Answered by vaidehinidish
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Answer:

After more than a year of virtual school and pandemic stress bearing down on them, reading has become a much-needed escape for families like the Elys. “Reading stories, especially fantasy, is a ‘social vaccination’ against all the restrictions because they help children find a way to exit what COVID-19 put into play,” says Prisco Piscitelli, UNESCO Chair on Health Education and Sustainable Development, who co-authored a 2020 study on the link between reading children’s literature and wellbeing. And after a recent study by Stanford University found that reading fluency is lagging by about 30 percent during the pandemic, especially for second- and third-graders, getting kids back to books is more important than ever.

The unpredictability of the past year might have kids feeling anxious about everything from vaccine availability to whether they’ll be able to have a birthday party, but studies have shown that fictitious worlds can help children deal with real-life problems and promote wellbeing. This type of literary panacea, officially dubbed bibliotherapy, relies on literature to boost mental health—a practice that dates back millennia to Egyptian pharaohs and Greek philosophers.

And kids’ books can be especially cathartic.

“Very few children’s stories don’t have a resolution,” says endowed professor Michelle H. Martin of the University of Washington, who specializes in children’s and young adult literature. “It might not be a happy ending, but it gives children a new perspective. Things might feel scary and dire right now, but better days are coming.”

As the COVID-19 pandemic rolls on—along with uncertainty that comes with it—here’s how parents can use books as part of their resilience and recovery toolkit.

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