There are some habits or values which we want our kids to imbibe early. These are called modelled habits. This is the main reason why we introduce certain habits and values early. For instance, right from brushing
teeth twice a day to eating three meals a day (differs in every culture and
community) to having a bath and doing household chores, we should have book
reading sessions of short duration daily so that it becomes a part of their
routine too.
Books are great to enhance imagination and also engage a
child constructively. Most of the time kids these days would prefer the screen.
But what a visual medium does, is to kill the imagination of a child. Whilst
reading a book, the same child will be forced to imagine the scene, the plot,
characters, seasons and sometimes even a piece of music mentioned by the
author.
Reading helps in writing and developing other fine arts
at a later stage. As you read each word, it gets embedded in the memory and
helps in word-picture association at a later stage. The child will be able to
do his projects effectively and without help. He will use these early
associations (from his or her early reading sessions) during his learning
sessions at home/or school. In effect, it helps in enriching vocabulary -
pictorial, verbal and written.
The earlier you take to reading, the more it will help
during your early learning years as well as professional life. You cannot
develop love for books overnight especially after you have become adults. If
you notice some people around you say that they do not like books, one of the
main reasons is that they were never encouraged to read when they were small or
they were pushed into academics by parents saying reading books is a waste of
time! I am sure most of you reading this will be able to relate to this.
So begin as early as possible - as early as when your
child is curious to explore coloured flyers/newspapers/books or magazines. Do
not kill that curiosity with your concern that they will tear the book to
pieces. Slowly inculcate the habit by showing pictures, sitting with your
children and eventually they will understand why books are lovely and they
should not damage them.
Reading is a life-long gift for your child!
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