Ages 4 – 8

Study links reading to young children to improved teen literacy

Study links reading to young children to improved teen literacy

Benefits of Reading Aloud to KidsContinuing with this month’s theme touting the benefits of reading aloud to your children, a report from the international Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development recently examined the long-term impact of parental support on literacy and found a strong link between reading aloud to young children and later teenage reading abilities. 

It also found that things like a family dinner and quality parent/child time make a positive impact when it comes to academics.

Based on teenagers in 14 developed countries, the study found that active parental involvement during the early years of school was a significant trigger for developing children’s reading skills that would carry through until they were teenagers. On average, teenagers whose parents had read aloud to young children were at least six months ahead in reading levels at the age of 15.

Discounting social and economic differences, the study found children with early support remained ahead in reading.  The report also found that parents did not have to be particularly well-educated themselves for this impact to be achieved. What was important was that parents read books regularly with their children and that they talked about what they were reading together.

This parental involvement overrode other social disadvantages and in some countries could represent more than a year’s advantage in reading levels at the age of 15 compared with children whose parents rarely read books with them.

The study, which draws on data from the international Programme for International Student Assessment tests, also found a link between teenagers’ reading skills and continued engagement with their parents. Everyday family get-togethers, where parents and children talk, could influence school performance, says the research.

“Eating meals together around the table and spending time just talking with one’s children are also associated with significantly better student reading performance in school,” says the OECD report.

 

Bedtime Reading Promotes Later Literacy

The good news is that reading “Goodnight Moon” or “Runaway Bunny” 10,000 times to your toddler wasn’t a waste of time after all.  Quite the contrary, in fact.

According to a study from Boston University, published in the Journal Archives of Disease in Childhood, reading to young children stimulates their development and gives them a head start when they reach school by promoting later literacy.

Apart from helping their reading, sharing a bedtime story with a child promotes motor skills, through learning to turn the pages, and stimulates memory.  It also improves their emotional and social development.

“You can imagine if someone technologically came up with a widget that would stimulate all aspects of a two-year-old’s development, everyone would want to buy it,” said Professor Barry Zuckerman, of the department of pediatrics at Boston University School of Medicine, who led the study.

Children who are read to from an earlier age have better language development and tend to have better language scores later in life. Getting children to grip the page with their thumb and forefinger improves motor skill development.

Most important, though, said Zuckerman, reading aloud is a period of shared attention and emotion between parent and child. This reinforces reading as a pleasurable activity.

“Children ultimately learn to love books because they are sharing it with someone they love.”

Lost Dr. Seuss Stories Hits Shelves

“The Bippolo Seed and Other Lost Stories” by Dr. Seuss

The late Theodor Geisel (more commonly known to you and me as Dr. Seuss), is making a triumphant return.

Seven rarely-seen Seuss tales are collected in The Bippolo Seed and Other Lost Stories, which were just published this September by Random House.  The stories originally appeared in Redbook magazine in 1950 and 1951 but never made it to book form.

They were tracked down by Seuss expert Charles D. Cohen, whose list of credentials—collector, scholar, dentist—is straight out of of one of the master’s fantastic tales and who has written an introduction to the book.

The title story involves a sly cat, a sucker of a duck, and a bad decision, while “Gustav the Goldfish” is an early, rhymed version of A Fish Out of Water, a book by Helen Palmer, Geisel’s wife.

Readers will also encounter the twin twosome of “Tadd and Todd,” a band of hungry creatures who follow a boy home in hopes of “Steak for Supper,” and “The Strange Shirt Spot,” the source for the bathtub-ring scene in “The Cat in the Hat Comes Back.”

Can you say great Christmas gift?

5 Best Picture Books About Dogs

I don’t usually review picture books but as promised…

Children’s Humorous Literature)

1. Harry the Dirty Dog by Gene Zion.

Harry is a white dog with black spots who hates to take a bath.  One day he gets so dirty he has black fur with white spots!  Uh oh… where’s Harry?

 

2. Go Dog Go by PD Eastman.

Life lessons? Romance? Literary instruction? Go, Dog. Go! offers all this and more, wrapped up in one simply worded, warmly hued package. Using single-syllable words in rhythmic repetition, and introducing colors and prepositions, this Seuss-styled classic has been an early favorite of children since 1961.

3. Clifford the Big Red Dog by Norman Bridwell.

Ah, Emily and Clifford — love them forever.  Fuzzy felt on the cover lets readers pet the “biggest, reddest dog” on the block in Clifford the Big Red Dog 40th Anniversary Edition by Norman Bridwell. In this original 1963 text, young Emily proudly introduces her oversize pet and his unusual tricks.

4. Olive, the Other Reindeer by Vivian Walsh.

This beautiful deluxe edition marks the tenth anniversary of J.otto Seibold and Vivian Walsh’s modern Christmas classic the story of a little dog named Olive with big reindeer dreams. This new edition is a larger version of the original book, and it features flaps to lift, spots to scratch and sniff, and a pop-up grand finale. Designed to be a perfect holiday gift, this edition will appeal to Olive’s many fans and is sure to make new ones.

5. Martha Speaks by Susan Meddaugh.

When Helen Finney feeds alphabet soup to her dog Martha, Martha begins to speak. But having a talking dog is not as fun as it seems.

Five Classic Books To Read-Aloud With Your Kids

One of the joys of being a parent is crawling into bed with your little ones and rereading something you remember fondly from childhood.  Or perhaps discovering a classic that you never quite got around to reading.  When it comes to bedtime read-aloud books, I prefer to stick with the classics of children’s literature.  It makes me feel like I’m helping to enrich their classical education.  Besides they can read “Diary of a Wimpy Kid” on their own.

Unfortunately, there’s been more than one time when I’ve eagerly cracked open some unfamiliar dusty old classic only to discover that it’s either seriously dated or too difficult to read (sorry “National Velvet”).  In the hope of attempting to help others avoid the mistakes I’ve made, here’s a list of five fun classics that everyone in the family will enjoy.

1.  Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White. Kind of a no-brainer. This charming tale of friendship between a girl, a pig and spider is and alway will be timeless.  It’s a good choice for the younger ones in the family — even 3 and up.  However, be prepared to cry your eyes out when Charlotte passes into the great beyond.  I confess that it was my young daughter comforting me with “it’s okay, Mommy.  Charlotte lived a good life” when we came to that part.

2.  “James and the Giant Peach” by Roald Dahl.  I adore all of Dahl’s work but at times he can be a little dark.  And while this story does have its share of wicked aunts and sad orphan boys, it’s quirky enough not to plant the seeds of serious nightmares in the head’s of the wee ones.  James’ journey inside an enormous stone fruit with a gaggle of insects is a quirky tale that is also a good choice to read to younger kids.  Dahl’s rich imagery, amusing characters and fantastical situations will delight all.

3.  The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis.  Beyond the wardrobe lies a magical world that will test four siblings and bring them together. This is the first in the series and one can always hope that kids will be inspired to read the rest on their own.  Once again, be aware that Aslan’s ultimate sacrifice near the end can be a little tough.  But never fear, it all turns out okay in the end.

 

4. The Black Stallion by Walter Farley.  This first book in the pulp series from the 40s is an action movie on paper including a fast moving plot; tons of adventure; and a love story between a boy and his horse.  I’d never read this book before my daughter and I picked it up, and I was more than pleasantly surprised with how much fun it turned out to be.  Also, when you’re done, rent the film adaptation from the 70s.  It’s a truly beautiful film.

5.  The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien. Read it quick before the film comes out in two years.  The language is somewhat more challenging in this longer book so probably not the best choice if you’re reading to kids six and under.  But Bilbo Baggins mythical quest has been keeping young and old interested for 70 years.

 

 

If you’ve got a favorite classic that you’re family has enjoyed hearing read aloud let me know about it.

“Gooney Bird Greene” by Lois Lowry

A series by Lois Lowry

THE BOOK MAMA BASICS

For ages: 6 -10

Gender specific: Girl friendly

Any pictures?:  B&W illustrations

How long?: 96 pages

Are there more?: Three more books

Similar to?: Clementine or Moxie Maxwell

What’s it cost?$5.99 on Amazon

SynopsisGooney Bird by Lois Lowry (ages 6 -10) appears in Mrs. Pidgeon’s second-grade class one October, asking for a desk “right smack in the middle of the room” because she likes to be in the middle of everything. She dresses the part, too: it’s pj’s and cowboy boots that first day, green stretch pants, a polka-dot T-shirt, and a tutu the next. And she loves to tell stories, every bit of them “absolutely true,” from the tale of how she got her name to how she got her diamond earrings (gumball prizes) from the prince. The tales themselves, about moving, pets, and neighbors, are multilayered. They not only amuse but also illustrate characteristics of good storytelling. Before she’s done, our heroine has even found ways to elicit stories from her classmates from the silent Felicia Ann to the twitchy Barry. (edited from Booklist)

Review:  As a parent, sometimes it’s frustrating when your child decides to read a book beyond their reading level.  Sadly, this was just such a book at my house.  But, lo and behold, apparently it wove such an enchanting tale that my struggling reader stuck with it the whole way through.  Gotta love a book like that.  Perhaps not Lois Lowry’s best, but she once again demonstrates that she understands kids and what they respond to.  Gooney Bird has her own website that little fans may want to check out.  http://www.loislowry.com/goonybird.html

“I Spy Fly Guy” by Tedd Arnold

“I Spy Fly Guy” by Tedd Arnold

An easy reader series

THE BOOK MAMA BASICS

For ages: 4- 7

Gender specific: Boys will love it

Any pictures?:  Silly cartoons

How long?: 32 page

Are there more?: 8 or so.

What’s it similar to?: PJ Funnybones or Marvel I-Can-Read.

What’s it cost?$5.99 on Amazon

Synopsis:  Boy and fly meet and so begins a beautiful friendship.  Er, and so begins a very funny friendship.  Fly Guy’s propensity to hide in a garbage can when he and Buzz play hide-and-seek results in disaster. Fly Guy is carted off to the dump, and when the boy tries to find him, he is faced with a multitude of flies that look, act, and sound exactly like his pal.  Using hyperbole, puns, slapstick, and silly drawings, bestselling author/illustrator Tedd Arnold creates an easy reader that is full of fun.  (edited from School Library Journal)

Review:  If you’re struggling to get a kindergartener or first grader — especially a boy — to read on their own then you may find that “I Spy Fly Guy” by Tedd Arnold is stinky good fun for little readers.  It’s the perfect I-Can-Read series for kids just getting the hang of that whole reading thing.  The clever storylines don’t talk down to kids.  The vocabulary is fairly simple.  Told in three easy chapters, the number of words per page is manageable for young readers ranging from 2 to about 20 words per page.  And because it’s a series, if they like one, you’ll likely have an easier time getting to read the next one.

“Mercy Watson to the Rescue” by Kate DiCamillo

“Mercy Watson to the Rescue” by Kate DiCamillo

THE BOOK MAMA BASICS

For ages: 4 – 7

Gender specific: Fun for all pigs and people

Any pictures?:  Vibrant fun illustrations

Are there more?: Yes!  Six amazing porcine adventures

How long?: 80 page

What’s it cost?$5.99 on Amazon

Synopsis: After the Watsons tuck their pet pig Mercy into bed with a sweet song and a kiss, she feels warm inside, as if she has just eaten hot toast with a great deal of butter on it. However, afraid of the dark, Mercy snuggles into bed with the couple. Moments later, all three are rudely awakened from their lovely dreams with a BOOM! as their bed falls into a hole that has opened in the floor beneath them. In hot pursuit of buttered toast, the porcine wonder inadvertently gets help and saves the day.  Along the way, she causes great, humorous distress to the fussy next-door Lincoln sisters. (edited from School Library Journal)

Review: Mercy Watson, a disarmingly charming pig adopted by a loving human family, makes her debut in this new series of chapter books for beginning readers.  Three cheers for Kate DiCamillo author “The Tales of Despereaux” and “Because of Winn-Dixie.”  Mercy Watson is her first, but surely not last, foray into the “easy reader” genre.  This is a fun, quirky series about a lovable pig, who seems more like a family dog or even a small child, that will get the most reluctant little reader hooked.   Van Dusen’s bright gouache illustrations have a jovial exaggerated style and capture the sometimes frantic action and silliness of Mercy’s heroic escapade.  Four hooves up!

Fun, gorgeous illustrations for young readers. From Mercy Watson: Princess in Disguise

Happy Birthday, Dr. Seuss! 10 facts about the good doctor.

A book written with only 50 wordsApparently, Mrs. Obama does not like green eggs and ham.

Or so she said today at the Library of Congress where the NEA kicked off  Read Across America Day nationwide in conjunction with what would have been Dr. Seuss’s 107th birthday.   Thousands of schools, libraries, and community centers will be participating with kids everywhere reading “The Cat in the Hat” and “Green Eggs and Ham” while wearing floppy red and white hats.

So in honor of his birthday today March 2, here are 10 quick facts about the good doctor. However, I must add that I found so much contradictory legend and lore about Dr. Seuss floating around out there that I can’t completely state that everything you’re reading here is 100% accurate.  But, hey, no one liked a good story than Dr. Seuss himself.

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“A Book of Sleep” by Il Sung Na

A book of sleep by Il Sung Na

When the sky grows dark
and the moon glows bright,
everyone goes to sleep . . .
except for the watchful owl!

Just paging through “A Book of Sleep” by Il Sung Na (4 – 8 ) makes me want to crawl back in bed.  This book worked particularly well in my house because we have a neighborhood owl who occasionally camps out in a nearby tree and hoos quietly through the night.

With a spare, soothing text and beautifully rich and textured illustrations of a starry night, this is the perfect “book of sleep.” Join the owl on his moonlit journey as he watches all the other animals settle in for the night: some sleep standing up, while some sleep on the move! Some sleep peacefully alone, while others sleep all together, huddled close.

Il Sung Na makes his American debut with this gorgeous bedtime offering. While each animal rests in its own special way, your little ones will drift softly off to a cozy night’s sleep.

“How to Eat Fried Worms” plus recipes!

Got a boy in grades 3 -6 who isn’t crazy about reading? Dare him not to love this book.

How to Eat Fried Worms by Thomas Rockwell is a ghastly gastronomical treat that will dazzle young reader particularly boys and tomboys.  And just regular old girls too.  This little novel has been happily repulsing kids in the best possible way since its original publication in 1973.

It seems poor Billy must eat 15 worms in 15 days–but the reward will be worth it: $50 for a shiny new minibike.  Luckily, Billy’s friends cook up these fat juicy grubs in a variety of appetizing ways–drenched in ketchup and mustard, fried in butter and cornmeal, and the pièce de résistance, a Whizband Worm Delight (an ice-cream worm cake).  It’s choke full of memorable lines and refrains like:

“Trout, Salmon, flounder, perch,
I’ll ride my minibike into church.
Dace, tuna, haddock, trout,
Wait’ll you hear the minister shout.”

My ancient Yearling edition comes complete with recipes for such things as Worm Pizza and Crunchy Carrot Worm Salad.  How to Eat Fried Worms is a gem that still holds up after almost 40 years.

(This is a partial repost ((what can I say?  I always edit)) from August 2010)

“Hide and Squeak” by Heather Vogel Frederick

Hide and Squeak” by Heather Vogel Frederick, illustrated by C.F. Payne ( ages 3-6) Reviewed by Mary Harris Russell for the Chicago Tribune.

A mouse father and baby play hide-and-seek before bedtime, in the front yard. Mice with a front yard? It’s your front yard, dear reader, facing a solid brick house but not so solid that mice can’t enter.

Illustrations by C.F. Payne

The pictures and the words capture the speed (and cloak of invisibility, almost) with which a mouse can move. The words come in short, highly repeatable bundles: “Daddy sees your whiskers! Daddy’s on your trail.”

The mice faces are expressive and detailed and their surroundings have all the charm of “The Borrowers” world. Winsome and speedy this book is an easy re-read.

"Madeline at the White House" by J.B. Marciano

Madeline Visits the White House by John Bemelmans Marciano
By Sally Lodge/ Publisher’s Weekly, Jan 27, 2011

“In John Bemelmans Marciano’s Madeline at the White House, 12 little girls arrive—in two straight lines—at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue just in time for the annual Easter Egg Roll. Along on the trip is Madeline’s magician friend, appearing here as a fez-wearing rabbit, who escorts her and the president’s delighted daughter on a fantastical nighttime tour of Washington. Published this week by Viking, the book evolved from several stories initially conceived by Ludwig Bemelmans, Madeline’s creator and Marciano’s grandfather, who died in 1962.

While looking through his grandfather’s files in preparation for writing 1999’s Bemelmans: The Life and Art of Madeline’s Creator, Marciano found material for a book that Bemelmans had never completed. Entitled Madeline and the Magician, the story brought back the magician introduced inMadeline’s Christmas (which first appeared in McCall’s magazine in 1956 and was published posthumously by Viking in 1985).

The original "Madeline"

“In this new book, the magician was meant to fulfill the girls’ fantasies, but Miss Clavel sends him away and he goes up in a puff of smoke,” says Marciano. “My grandfather had made a sketch of the magician’s fez resting on top of his funeral carriage, which I always thought was such a great image. In the end, the magician transforms himself into a cat wearing a fez, and comes back to stay with the girls.”

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"Chester Cricket’s Tale of the City" by David Ulin

From David Ulin’s LATIMES blog.  January 5, 2011 |  6:00 am.  My mom sent me this review when it was reprinted in the Chicago Tribune. It reminded me how much I love both Cricket in Time Square and Charlotte’s Web by Garth Williams.  It’s a classic that stands the test of time from generation to generation.  Perfect bedtime reading for you and your kidlets.

CrickettimessqMy favorite books for kids are those that start out naturalistically and then go quietly, gently off the rails. “Charlotte’s Web” is a perfect example: E.B. White’s descriptions of New England farm life are so precise, so deftly rendered, that it seems entirely believable when the animals start talking and Charlotte begins to spell out words in her web.

This, of course, is one of the wonders of children’s literature, its sense of the world as mysterious, even magical, its recognition that there is much in daily life beyond our reach. At its best, childhood is like that also, although more often, it can be a landscape of arbitrary rules and inexplicable adult tension, in which too much happens (literally and figuratively) above our heads.

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Mind your own beeswax! Take a secret peek into "Amelia’s Notebook"

Got a pretty little reader who isn’t crazy about actually reading?  All the Junie B’s and Judy M’s of the world hold no appeal for her? “Too many words!”  Then check out this fun, colorful series.  Your kidlets will be reading without even knowing it’s good for them.

Amelia’s Notebook by Marissa Moss (ages 7-10, strong girl appeal) is designed as an upbeat, first-person story which resembles a real diary.   The cover bears the familiar black-and-white abstract design of a .99 cent composition book, decorated with color

Got a sweet young reader who isn’t crazy about actually reading?  All the Junie B’s and Judy M’s of the world hold no appeal for her? “Too many words!”  Then check out this fun, colorful series.  Your kidlets will be reading without even knowing it’s good for them.

Amelia’s Notebook by Marissa Moss (ages 7-10, strong girl appeal) is designed as an upbeat, first-person story which resembles a real diary.   The cover bears the familiar black-and-white abstract design of a .99 cent composition book, decorated with color cartoons by Amelia, the book’s nine-year-old “author.”

Inside, on lined pages, Amelia writes about her recent move to a new town, doodles pictures of people she meets and saves such mementos as postage stamps and a birthday candle.

She misses her best friend, Nadia, but her moments of sadness are balanced by optimism-she distracts herself by drawing and by writing short stories. In appropriately conversational terms, Amelia complains that her big sister invades her privacy (“So Cleo if you are reading this right now-BUG OFF and STAY OUT”); gripes about cafeteria food (“Henna says they use dog food); and jokes in classic elementary-school gross-out fashion.  

Readers will understand Amelia’s wish to put her “top-secret” thoughts on paper, and they’ll notice that even though she’s uneasy about attending a different school, she’s starting over successfully. (Reed Business Information, Inc).

Keep in mind that there are some 15 books in the series.  Also, a mildde-school aged Amelia has another series of journals about life after elementary school.