Reading aloud to older children

I thought that perhaps reading aloud to tweens/teens was too juvenile a practice, but a little research revealed the opposite.

Jim Trelease is an educator and author who stresses reading aloud to children to instil in them the love for literature.

Per him, reading aloud to your child is like an advertisement for reading. When you read aloud, you are creating a child’s interest in reading. A child who has been read to, will want to learn to read herself. She will want to do what she sees her parent doing. But if a child never sees anyone pick up a book, she is not going to have that desire.

Reading aloud to older children-even up to age 14, who can comfortably read to themselves- has benefits both academic and emotional, says Jim Trelease.

People often say,” My child is in fourth grade and she already knows how to read, why should I read to her?”
The reply is, “Your child may be reading on a fourth-grade level, but what level is she listening at?”
Per Jim, a fourth grader can enjoy a more complicated plot than she can read herself, and reading aloud is going to hook her. Children have no problem with comprehension when they are using their listening skills.