Pre-teens and
reading: The
road to academic success is paved with books
Is there a parent
who hasn’t at one time or another longed for a list of sure-fire
suggestions for raising successful, healthy and well-adjusted
children? The reality is that such a list doesn’t exist and much
of parenting is creative trial and error. However, there is one
thing that will help kids become better learners now and throughout
their lives. Want to know a tried and true secret to school success?
It’s reading!
Believe it or
not, something as simple as reading can make a huge difference for
children academically. But there’s a catch. It has to happen on a
regular basis and has to be something children have learned to value
and enjoy rather than endure.
Students today
are being asked to tackle more and more learning, with the goal of
helping them find their place in an increasingly complex world.
Preparing students to meet this challenge is what underlies the
higher standards that New York State is implementing at all grade
levels. And a key component of these higher standards is literacy -
i.e., the ability to read and write at very sophisticated levels.
Reading during
the junior high years
The junior high
grades coincide with children’s greatest physical, emotional and
hormonal changes since infancy. As a result, interest and even
ability to focus on academics can sometimes wane. Unfortunately, as
expectations increase, a hiatus from learning is not a luxury that
children can afford to indulge in their junior high years.
Increasingly,
junior high schoolers are being asked to take what they have learned
through reading and to analyze it in writing or apply it to another
learning task. These skills are crucial not just in English class
but also in science, social studies and even math. At the end of
eighth grade, they all must take a series of state tests designed to
find out if they are ready to meet the challenges of a high school
curriculum, and these tests rely very heavily on literacy skills.
What families
can do to encourage reading
Reading is an activity that
improves with practice. The New York State Board of Regents
recommends that all K-12 students read at least 25 age-appropriate
books per year. Here are some suggestions to help your children
enjoy meeting this challenge:
- Make
your home a good reading environment.
In The Read-Aloud Handbook, author Jim Trelease
encourages parents to make sure their children have good lamps
for reading in bed and an assortment of reading materials.
Subscribe to newspapers and magazines. Buy your children books
as gifts and encourage them to use a portion of their own
spending money for books. Also, set aside time in the evening
for family reading (alone and together).
- Share
your reading experiences with your children.
Adults who are readers tend to have children who like reading.
So it’s important for your children to see you reading. It’s
also good to talk with them about what you are reading and why
you are enjoying it.
- Help
your children find books they will enjoy.
Libraries, bookstores and the Internet are all wonderful sources
of what’s new in literature for children in the middle grades.
Generally, pre-teens will choose books with characters a few
years older than themselves as a way to find out how others have
handled the awesome developmental tasks of adolescence and to
dispel some of their questions and fears about growing up.
- Read to
and with your children.
Becoming a Nation of Readers, the groundbreaking report by the
Center for the Study of Readers, states, "the single most
important activity for building the knowledge required for
eventual success in reading is reading aloud to children."
This applies not only to very young children but also pre-teens.
Jim Trelease suggests trying different types of writing —
excerpts from magazine articles that interest you both, a poem
or verse that hits on a topic you have been discussing, or a
couple of jokes to lighten a tense mood. Trelease also suggests
re-reading favorite picture books from your own childhood or
from your children’s younger years.
"When we go back as adults
to the books we enjoyed as children, we often bring to those books a
perspective that was missing earlier and discover new
dimensions," says Trelease. And academics aside, reading
together can open much needed communication between you and your
pre-teens about their daily lives and concerns.
Booklists on
the Web:
Books for
Families:
- Read All About It:
Great Read-Aloud Stories, Poems, and Newspaper Pieces for
Preteens and Teens
- The Read-Aloud
Handbook by Jim Trelease
- Parents Who Love
Reading, Kids Who Don’t by Mary Leonhardt
- Read To Me: Raising
Kids Who Love To Read by Bernice Cullinan
"How do we improve
vocabulary, spelling and writing? By reading, reading, reading...The
more a child meets words and sees how they are used in sentences and
paragraphs, the greater the chances he will spell words correctly.
Conversely, the less you read, the fewer words you meet and the less
certain you are of spelling and meaning." — from The
Read Aloud Handbook by Jim Trelease
For permission to reprint this
article, please contact the Capital Region BOCES Communications
Service by e-mailing us at dbushsuf@gw.neric.org.
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