Tuesday, June 24, 2014
AAP Urges Parents to Read to Their Babies with New Policy Guidelines
This morning, when I first heard about this important announcement from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), I couldn't help to think about my post last week, "Can Babies Learn to Read." As I mentioned in my piece, I have always believed in the importance of reading stories to babies, as even though they may not have the capacity to learn to read during this stage in their life, this early exposure to books during their infancy will not only lead them on the path to developing those all-important early speech, language and phonemic skills, but you are helping to open the doors to furthering their imagination through the wonder that only books can bring.
Kudos to Dr. Dipesh Navsaria, medical director of the Wisconsin chapter of Reach Out and Read (a nonprofit literacy group that enlists over thousands of pediatricians throughout the United States to distribute books to low-income families), Too Small to Fail (a joint effort from the nonprofit Next Generation and the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation) and Scholastic for working together on furthering this vital cause.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/24/us/pediatrics-group-to-recommend-reading-aloud-to-children-from-birth.html?_r=1
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