How To – And Not To – Get Kids Excited About Reading

I loved this post from an interview with kidlit author extraordinaire, Jon Scieszka, so much I had to put the whole thing in here.  Thanks to Parnassus Books in Nashville for sharing this great interview on your blog.

For this discussion, we had just a single question — one we hear all the time from customers:

What advice do you have for parents and teachers of kids who don’t (yet) like to read? 

JS: As a parent, teacher, and author, I have assembled a great list, from actual live experience, of what not to do to engage a kid in reading:

– Do not tell them reading is magical
or good for them
or important
or something they better do for an hour before bedtime or goddammit they will end up like shiftless Uncle Dave who is always asking to borrow money.

– Do not denigrate kids’ other activities – video games, texting, talking to friends, watching TV, sleeping… as stupid in comparison to reading.
– Do not insist they read “classics” because you had to.
– Do not refuse to get a book for them because it isn’t up to their reading level.
– Do not tell them (or me, or anyone) that they are “reluctant readers.”

From other experiences as parent, teacher, author, I’ve also gathered a pretty fun list of things you can do to inspire a kid to give reading a try:

– Find out what the kid really loves, and help them find a book, magazine, or any kind of text about that love. Without judgement. The subject can be sharks, volcanoes, bodily functions, the Guinness Book of World Records, fighting ships of World War II. And they can read about this love for as long as they want.
– Expand your definition of reading to include humor, sci-fi, nonfiction, mysteries, graphic novels, wordless books, audio. It’s all storytelling.
– Collections of short stories are great low-pressure introductions to all different kinds of reading. The GUYS READ Library of Great Reading is built for this. Try different stories and different genres. If they don’t like a story, they don’t have to read all of it. Try something else.
– Find positive reading role models, especially for boys. We tell kids that reading is for everyone. But we don’t often see men reading.
– Promise there won’t be a quiz or a list of ten questions after the book.

51mmsmQb4FLAnd I think the ultimate strategy is to see every kid as reader in search of that book that is just right for them.

I heard the best line from a kid at an autographing last year. He came up with his mom. She introduced him to me as “a very reluctant reader”. He very thoughtfully, with every bit of 8-year-old guy cool, corrected her, saying, “Mom, I’m not a reluctant reader. I’m a very picky reader.”

And isn’t that what makes a great reader?

 

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