Maple Valley Library’s outdoor story time at Lake Wilderness Park last Wednesday attracted Laura Ransom and her daughters, Donna (left) and Hannah. - CHARLES CORTES/Reporter
CHARLES CORTES/Reporter
Maple Valley Library’s outdoor story time at Lake Wilderness Park last Wednesday attracted Laura Ransom and her daughters, Donna (left) and Hannah.

Read and lead by example


August 5, 2008 · Updated 12:09 AM 

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Tips from children’s librarian Sharon Chastain to help you get your kids reading:

• “First of all, modeling. Read in front of your children. And it doesn’t have to be ‘Moby Dick.’ It can be the newspaper or a magazine. It doesn’t matter what you read, just that your child sees you reading.”

• “Have books around. That’s where the library comes in. You can have a variety of books and change them out every week. And it’s free.”

• “Reduce screen time spent in front of the computer, video game or TV.”

• “Don’t get hung up on 20 minutes (a suggested daily reading regimen). Read when you can. Even if you only have five or 10 minutes, sit down and read a little. Consistency is the key.”

• “Think about reading in a less rigid way, other than a sit-down-in-a-chair-and-read format. Why not make sure your child has a book while waiting for a dentist or doctor’s visit? Or waiting in the car for their brother or sister to finish an activity? Have a book handy for those filler moments.”

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