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Listen with tum

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By: Suzanne Dixon

Learn About The Pampers Parenting Institute
Pampers Parenting Institute
Article Summary

Even before your baby is born you can making reading part of your baby's life.

Begin activities that set up a child to read throughout life while you are still waiting for your child to be born. Defining yourselves as a family that reads regularly will set the course for reading readiness after the baby arrives.

  • Set up a daily reading time for yourself. Find a place away from distraction, and make sure you have good lighting and a comfortable chair with plenty of room for a small person to join you later. Enjoy reading every day and the habit will be well established by the time you have a small partner to share that time with.

  • Find your old storybooks from your own childhood. You'll be surprised by how many of the stories and pictures will bring up strong memories. Some books will seem dated; some will seem timeless. Decide which ones you want to share. Talk to your own parents or other relatives who read to you and say thanks. Now you're ready to carry on the reading traditions of your family.

  • If people want to give your baby presents, ask for some books. Your friends may give your baby those lasting stories that were important to them or their children. It's a ready-made review service for children's literature, as the best books are the ones that are loved the most.

  • Take a tour of your house from a reader's perspective. In a home that supports reading, every room should have books in it. Does yours? If a child grows up surrounded by books, he is more likely to make them a regular part of his life. Are you a good model for this immersion pattern?

  • As you visit nursery schools or interview childminders who will come into your home, ask about reading and story time. See whether that is a priority and a regular part of their planned care. Make sure they understand that you think reading is important. You'll want to consider many issues when picking childcare, and reading and language activities should be on your list of things to ask about as you make the decision.

  • Write your baby's daily story. Start a book that tells what you do each day in the last part of your pregnancy. A detailed description of one event or a short observation, perhaps with a sketch, will be meaningful to your child later as he reads what you did together in the days and weeks before he was born. Children love their own story more than any other, so start writing it now. You'll be surprised how soon you'll have to begin sharing authorship with a toddler eager to get you to take his dictation as he narrates his days.

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