RSS

Hello and Welcome to Phonics and Homeschooling. The resources for teach children at home. A method of teaching reading in which people learn to associate letters with the speech sounds they represent, rather than learning to recognize the whole word as a unit. Also find information about children education at home or Homeschooling.

Teenagers and Reading

Perhaps the teenager in your family was once an avid reader, but now hardly ever opens a book, or perhaps your child never liked reading in the first place.

You know that reading is important, and you obviously want to make sure that your teenager grows into adulthood with all the skills he or she needs to succeed.


Website Promotion Service

What can you do?
In this article, RIF suggests how parents can help their teenagers decide for themselves that reading is important to their lives.

With that in mind, half of this article speaks directly to young people. We encourage you to share it with the teens in your family.

Try to Avoid...
Before we list ways to encourage teen reading that do work, here are a few tactics that don't work:

  • Pressuring, nagging, or bribing. Encourage your kids, but don't hound them.
  • Criticizing what your teens read. Explain what troubles you about certain types of reading materials after reading them yourself. Forbid as little as possible. And whenever you can, accept differences of opinion as just that.
  • Lavishing too much praise. If you catch your youngster reading, show interest, but don't make a big deal out of it. Teens need to know that they're reading for their own pleasure—not for your approval.

Reading: What's In It for Teenagers?The following suggest ideas for teens from RIF.

If you're a teenager who has lost interest in reading or never liked it much, this is for you.

We're about to make a pitch for reading—reading things that interest you, at your own pace, apart from schoolwork and other obligations.

Why read?
People who like to read do it because reading does something for them. It sends chills down their spine, brings tears to their eyes, or turns on the lightbulb in their brain.

And, let's face it: they need reading, just as you do. You need reading now for school, and you're going to need it even more later on, when you take on a job and other adult responsibilities. Good reading skills are a must. Ask any employer!

So, besides the practical reasons, what's in it for you? Consider the possibilities. Through reading you can:

  • Become an expert. An expert on any subject you like—from sports stats to spelunking, coins to carburetors, or anything in between.
  • Live dangerously. Through reading you can share the challenges, fears, thrills, and achievements of those you're reading about without the risk.
  • Have a few laughs. Sit down with a book by your favorite stand-up comedian, a collection of jokes or cartoons, or a humor magazine.
  • See the world. Without leaving your room, you can visit places that fascinate you.
  • Travel through time. Explore the frontiers of the Old West or the frontiers of space. Historical fiction and science fiction move you back and forth in time.
  • Use your brains. Solve a mystery by figuring out whodunit, outwit a crafty villain, or think yourself out of a perilous situation. Your first clue: look up Mysteries in the library catalog or ask for detective fiction at a bookstore.
  • Get some free advice. Lots of novels feature teenage characters who have problems and pressures like the ones you're dealing with. Check out the Young Adult section of the library or bookstore.
  • Discover new interests. Through reading, you may develop an interest in something you knew nothing about before.
  • Find a cause. Get smart on an issue that matters to you. Read about people and organizations that support your cause, and get involved.
  • Escape. Noise, tension, or boredom getting you down? Give yourself a break. Leave everything behind as you escape into a book.
  • Grow up. If you find that you're outgrowing some of the books and magazines written for teens, ask to borrow some of the books and magazines your parents are reading.
from : RIF Parent Guide Brochure www.rif.org

0 comments: