How to Raise a Reader Quotes
How to Raise a Reader
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Pamela Paul2,229 ratings, 3.94 average rating, 412 reviews
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How to Raise a Reader Quotes
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“At the dinner table, make “what you’re reading” as regular a part of conversation”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“Children who read are, yes, likely to excel academically, but there’s much more to the picture. The latest research shows that children who read at home are also better at self-regulation and executive function—those life skills that make us happier and well adjusted: controlling impulses, paying attention, setting goals and figuring out how to achieve them.”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“Studies have shown that children, even more than adults, absorb and retain stories better when they read them in print.”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“You can explain to them that earlier and faster is not always better, and that strengths develop over the long term.”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“official”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“According to studies that measure the likelihood of a child growing up to be a reader, the most important factor is not how well reading was taught in the child’s school, nor the number of hours spent reading aloud to the child. Regardless of the parents’ income level or education, the statistic most highly correlated to literacy is the number of books present in the home.”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“A minute spent reading to your kids now will repay itself a million-fold later,” the author George Saunders”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“by setting out purposefully to raise a reader—you’re helping her become someone who controls her own destiny.”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“It’s stressful to be a parent. It’s stressful to be a person. But I’ve found that even in the most difficult moments, on the most challenging days, I can usually reach for a book and feel lifted up, returned to myself. On days when I’ve felt as though I have nothing left to give to my kids, I’ve been able to sit next to them and open a book. We start reading, and the world looks different.”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“We all love remembering the satisfaction, the joy, the almost giddy exhilaration of seeing the world of letters, and as a consequence the entire world, open up to us.”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“School is where children learn that they have to read. Home is where kids learn to read because they want to. It’s where they learn to love to read.”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“Children who read are, yes, likely to excel academically, but there’s much more to the picture. The latest research shows that children who read at home are also better at self-regulation and executive function—those life skills that make us happier and well adjusted: controlling impulses, paying attention, setting goals and figuring out how to achieve them. Think of this as “life readiness.” By being part of your child’s reading life—by setting out purposefully to raise a reader—you’re helping her become someone who controls her own destiny.”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“Some kids prefer to engage with characters who are dealing with, say, bullying, gender identity, and racism outside the confines of the all-too-real world readers themselves live in.”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
“Books are a pleasure and they anchor your greater values.”
― How to Raise a Reader
― How to Raise a Reader
