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Study says reading aloud to children, more than talking, builds literacy [EdSource.org]

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In “The Pout-Pout Fish” children’s picture book, the author weaves words like “aghast” and “grimace” into a story about a fish who thought he was destined to “spread the dreary-wearies all over the place” until…well, no need to spoil the ending.

Finding such rich language in a picture book is not unusual, and reading those stories aloud will introduce children to an extensive vocabulary, according to new research conducted by Dominic Massaro, a professor emeritus in psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He said although parents can build their children’s vocabularies by talking to them, reading to them is more effective.

Reading aloud is the best way to help children develop word mastery and grammatical understanding, which form the basis for learning how to read, said Massaro, who studies language acquisition and literacy. He found that picture books are two to three times as likely as parent-child conversations to include a word that isn’t among the 5,000 most common English words.

 

[For more of this story, written by Susan Frey, go to http://edsource.org/2015/study...uilds-literacy/82045]

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     Our local Library Assistant Director, or our Children's Librarian, brings assorted brand new Children's Books, and gives them away, free, to the children at our local family "Soup Kitchen" dinner, once a month during summer, and once weekly during the school year. This is reportedly part of a national program to disperse children's book to children who might not otherwise be apt to get them. She also reads to the children, before the start of the meal, unless one of the children who reads quite well, reads aloud to the other children.

     She also has a bibliography of children's books addressing a number of "traumatic stressors" which children might be exposed to (floods, earthquakes, hurricanes, a parent in the military on combat duty, etc.), and which may also serve as "Resilience builders" for children who read them, or do "book reports" on-for school, too!  

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