Reading Aloud to Children Improves Crucial Development Skills

As we continue to evolve the digital media market, we also continue to focus less on traditional values from our childhood. Values such as story time with our family members who gave us something to look forward to before bedtime every night. 



We at Brightside Academy continue to put forth strong literacy initiatives into our academies with consistent reading or “circle time” across all age groups. Our goal is to increase literacy and motivate reading at home. According to the New York Times, Study Finds Reading to Children of All Ages Grooms Them to Read More on Their Own a survey conducted of over 1,000 children ages 6-17 concluded that only 31% were read a book almost daily. “I don’t think that parents know how important that time and the role that it plays in children’s lives,” Kristen Harmeling said, a partner at YouGov. Not only does reading improve vocabulary, language development, and comprehension, but reading to your child unifies the family dynamic. “Children in the survey frequently cited reading aloud as a special bonding time with their parents.” 

Reading aloud also helps children find their inner voice and develop a sense of “self” through story-telling. “Sharing books with children can also help them learn about peer relationships, coping strategies, building self-esteem and general world knowledge,” according to Reading Aloud to Children: The Evidence from ReachOutandRead.org. 


As well as relationship building, reading helps children develop phonologically. When reading aloud, children are able to associate sounds and pronunciation with written words by practicing sound patterns. According to ReachOutandRead.org, “When children do well at detecting and manipulating syllables, rhymes and phonemes, they tend to learn more quickly [how] to read.”

Whether your child is 11-months or 11-years, reading out loud has no age limit. Just as you would transition from pop-up, picture books to nursery rhymes to 50+ pages of a Dr. Seuss story, you adjust the complexity of what you’re reading as your child grows. “It’s this idea of marinating children in higher-level vocabulary,” said Pam Allyn, founder of LitWorld.Org. Although there isn’t much evidence to support improved reading comprehension among older children being read aloud to, literacy experts say that if you increase the difficulty of your reading context, children can hear and understand more complex words that build confidence to tackle different forms of literature on their own.


So as you get your child cleaned up, dressed, and tucked into bed tonight, pull out a book, any book, and read it aloud. The long-term effects can drastically improve his/her future across all stages of child development.

To further motivate our Brightside Academy team and families, we invite everyone to participate in our Dr. Seuss/Read Across America contest, going on now across our social media accounts. Simply post a picture of you reading to your child and include hashtag #BSAFamilyLiteracy before March 12th. Four families have the chance to win a set of NEW Dr. Seuss books!