It's early evening, and at first, there is quiet in the living room. Then nine-year-old Georgia giggles from where she sprawls under the window on the couch. She has reached a funny part of her novel. Kevin, 14, recites aloud an interesting fact from the website he is perusing at the small computer desk tucked into the corner of the room. Sophie, 12, longingly mentions an ad describing a horse for sale in her magazine and nudges her mother to look. Mom, sitting beside her on the second couch, pauses from reading the weekend newspaper and responds, for the millionth time, with a firm but sympathetic, "Hmm. Sounds like a good one, but we can't get a horse!"
It's a cosy scene that combines the simple joy of family togetherness with the many practical benefits of reading. Is it too good to be true? No way. This is a description of an evening in my own home. It's a result of some simple, thoughtful strategies that I've incorporated into my family's daily life, with only a little extra juggling and manoeuvring! Here are ways that you, too, can hook your kids on reading at home:
1. Set a good example
Take some time to sit down and enjoy a book or a magazine while your children are awake and active. This might seem impossible, but don't always save your own reading for the hours after the children have gone to bed. It's important that your kids see you, their role model, reading. You'll be doing what they do at many elementary schools: making DEAR (Drop Everything and Read) time.
2. Keep reading material handy -- for you and your kids
If it's available, it's more likely to be read. Throw a magazine in the diaper bag. On the coffee table or in a bin beside the couch, rotate a variety of books, such as intriguing nonfiction with lots of sidebars and cool captioned photos or full-colour atlases. Dust off one or two of the volumes in your set of encyclopedias and stash them in the car, along with bird books, word puzzles and brainteasers. They can entertain passengers ("Are we there yet?") and waiting drivers ("I'll be right there!") alike.
3. Put bookcases in the living room, in bedrooms or even the hallway
Make books a part of your household decor. Putting a few anthologies of poetry, short stories and joke books in the bathroom is not a bad idea, either.
4. Be more aware of your reading community
Make trips to the local library and bookstores with your children. Attend local book fairs. Find out when one of your children's favourite authors is coming to town and drop in on a reading. Phyllis Simon, owner of Kidsbooks in Vancouver, says: "If a parent makes the effort to take a child to a place where books abound then it says to the child that books are important. It's a powerful statement to a child."
Page 1 of 2 -- Discover how easy it is to build your own library at home on page 2






