Guest Post, Young Readers

Guest Post: 5 Tips for Getting Your Kids to Read (and Love!) Books this Summer, by Tracey Hecht

The Nocturnals
Summertime is here, TGIS!  Time to enjoy longer days, looser schedules and hopefully your kids engaged in great books. Reading in the summer maintains skills developed in the previous school year and prepares your child for the upcoming fall. But as importantly, it also allows your child time to read purely for enjoyment. Here are some tips for getting them interested:

    The Mysterious Abductions (The Nocturnals Series #1)

    The Mysterious Abductions (The Nocturnals Series #1)

    Hardcover $15.99

    The Mysterious Abductions (The Nocturnals Series #1)

    By Tracey Hecht
    Illustrator Kate Liebman

    Hardcover $15.99

  1. Let Them Pick What They Want

Comic books and graphic novels are ok! This is especially true given the variety and sophistication of all the many available today. Narratives are of course great too, but it’s better to have your child read a graphic novel for 2 hours because they love it than fight them to read some other more traditional book for 20 minutes. My middle daughter spent an entire summer with her nose in Archie & Veronicas. She grew out of comic books, but her love of reading remained forever.

  1. Put Books Everywhere

Visit the bookstore, the library, a second hand shop and make sure books are all around your life. Put a bunch in the back seat of the car, on the kitchen table, in your pool bag. Kids pick up books if they are around, and they can handle multiple narratives. Don’t worry about that one book traveling with you everywhere (and of course which you’ll inevitably forget someplace!), just put lots of books in lots of places.

  1. Take Turns Reading

Don’t be afraid to pick up one of your kid’s books yourself. Read it to yourself and then ask your son or daughter about something in that chapter. Read it out loud and let him or her enjoy it with you. Ask your child to read a chapter to you. Reading is one of the best ways to connect as a family and also one of the easiest. If you engage in your child’s text, your child will engage as well.

  • Let Them Pick What They Want
  • Comic books and graphic novels are ok! This is especially true given the variety and sophistication of all the many available today. Narratives are of course great too, but it’s better to have your child read a graphic novel for 2 hours because they love it than fight them to read some other more traditional book for 20 minutes. My middle daughter spent an entire summer with her nose in Archie & Veronicas. She grew out of comic books, but her love of reading remained forever.

    1. Put Books Everywhere

    Visit the bookstore, the library, a second hand shop and make sure books are all around your life. Put a bunch in the back seat of the car, on the kitchen table, in your pool bag. Kids pick up books if they are around, and they can handle multiple narratives. Don’t worry about that one book traveling with you everywhere (and of course which you’ll inevitably forget someplace!), just put lots of books in lots of places.

    1. Take Turns Reading

    Don’t be afraid to pick up one of your kid’s books yourself. Read it to yourself and then ask your son or daughter about something in that chapter. Read it out loud and let him or her enjoy it with you. Ask your child to read a chapter to you. Reading is one of the best ways to connect as a family and also one of the easiest. If you engage in your child’s text, your child will engage as well.

    The Ominous Eye (The Nocturnals Series #2)

    The Ominous Eye (The Nocturnals Series #2)

    Hardcover $15.99

    The Ominous Eye (The Nocturnals Series #2)

    By Tracey Hecht
    Illustrator Kate Liebman

    Hardcover $15.99

  • Read Yourself
  • Many people say, “I don’t have time to read” or “I don’t like to ignore my child by reading my own book.”  Kids listen to half of what you say, but watch everything you do. The more you read, the more they will too. If you pick up your own book a few times, your child will start to do the same. Next thing you know, you’ll both be curled up on the couch reading together.

    1. Make It Fun, Not Punishment

    This is important: don’t make reading the thing your child has to do to earn something better (aka: “If you read for a half hour, you can watch TV”).  This positions reading as an obligation, not a pleasure. Try instead to build reading into the parts of your day that will make it fun: Before bed; all kids like to postpone bedtime! As an alternative to doing chores, “You can help me empty the dishwasher or you can read while I do it”.  With a great snack and time together, “Let’s make a big bowl of buttered popcorn and get in bed with our books!”
    Summer is the time of year when you can let it go a bit, so do!  Let the chores go slightly undone, the bedtime be slightly later, the rules bend here and there, and then let reading sneak into those moments.  Your kids will love it and as a result they’ll love reading too.
    Tracey Hecht is the author of the Nocturnals Series. The first book in the series, The Abductions, is in stores now. The sequel, The Ominous Eye, will be out on September 20!

  • Read Yourself
  • Many people say, “I don’t have time to read” or “I don’t like to ignore my child by reading my own book.”  Kids listen to half of what you say, but watch everything you do. The more you read, the more they will too. If you pick up your own book a few times, your child will start to do the same. Next thing you know, you’ll both be curled up on the couch reading together.

    1. Make It Fun, Not Punishment

    This is important: don’t make reading the thing your child has to do to earn something better (aka: “If you read for a half hour, you can watch TV”).  This positions reading as an obligation, not a pleasure. Try instead to build reading into the parts of your day that will make it fun: Before bed; all kids like to postpone bedtime! As an alternative to doing chores, “You can help me empty the dishwasher or you can read while I do it”.  With a great snack and time together, “Let’s make a big bowl of buttered popcorn and get in bed with our books!”
    Summer is the time of year when you can let it go a bit, so do!  Let the chores go slightly undone, the bedtime be slightly later, the rules bend here and there, and then let reading sneak into those moments.  Your kids will love it and as a result they’ll love reading too.
    Tracey Hecht is the author of the Nocturnals Series. The first book in the series, The Abductions, is in stores now. The sequel, The Ominous Eye, will be out on September 20!