Ridgewood NJ, the Ridgewood Public Library has their Adult Summer Reading Club up and running! Ridgewood residents, call or write to register (and get a Chipotle buy one, get one free coupon). Stop by the Reference or Circulation Desks and get a raffle ticket for reading and attending any library programs. Weekly Friday drawings begin July 7 with prizes from Cupcakes by Carousel, Town & Country, new bestsellers and much more. Ridgewood residents, contact us today! (201) 670-5600, ext. 130 askridgewood@ridgewoodlibrary.org
Educator Jim Trelease explains why reading aloud to your child, no matter what her age, is the magic bullet for creating a lifelong reader.
by: Connie Matthiessen | January 14, 2016
Jim Trelease is the author of the respected, Read-Aloud Handbook, which some parents have called the “read aloud Bible.” The book is packed with information — from what really makes kids love reading, to tips for luring kids away from electronics and onto the page, to hundreds of read aloud titles. The Handbook’s seventh edition will be published in the spring of 2013 and, at 71 years old, Trelease says it will be his last. We reached Trelease recently in his home in Connecticut and asked him to explain why reading aloud is essential for kids of all ages.
Can you explain the link between reading aloud and school success?
It’s long established in science and research: the child who comes to school with a large vocabulary does better than the child who comes to school with little familiarity with words and a low vocabulary.
Why is that? If you think about it, in the early years of school, almost all instruction is oral. In kindergarten through second and third grades, kids aren’t reading yet, or are just starting, so it’s all about the teacher talking to the kids. This isn’t just true in reading but in all subjects; the teacher isn’t telling kids to open their textbooks and read chapter three. The teaching is oral and the kids with the largest vocabularies have an advantage because they understand most of what the teacher is saying. The kids with small vocabularies don’t get what is going on from the start, and they’re likely to fall further and further behind as time goes on.
How does a child develop a large vocabulary even before school starts? Children who are spoken to and read to most often are the ones with the largest vocabularies. If you think about it, you can’t get a word out of the child’s mouth unless he has heard it before. For example, the word “complicated.” A child isn’t going to say the word unless he has heard it before — and in fact to remember it, a child probably has to hear it multiple times. (That’s not true with swear words, of course. If a child hears his parent swear he’ll remember it the first time, and happily repeat it whenever he gets the chance.) But kids have to hear most words multiple times, so it’s important that their parents talk to and around them from the time they are very young, because that’s how they learn words.
Ridgewood NJ, Anybody ready for Fall? Before you get your sweaters out of storage, visit the Ridgewood Public Library in person or online and get your reserves in for some of the best new literary Fall releases. Here’s an insider tip: reserve The Nix by Nathan Hill. It’s a horrible title, but a great book about a man trying to either ruin or reconnect with the mother who left him.https://buff.ly/2bMLvdt
Looking for something new to read? Try a new novel by a debut author.
We all know the best place to go for book recommendations is the Ridgewood Public Library, but when you can’t get to us, check out some of these awesome sites for book lovers.
Do you want to join a book group? Are you in a book group and want some book recommendations? The Ridgewood Public Library can help. Visit our Book Group page online to see what we’re reading this month https://buff.ly/2bABnHM or stop by the Circulation Desk and ask for one of our Reader’s Advisors who can help you find your book group’s next great read.
The Ridgewood Public Library and the Ridgewood Historical Society will jointly welcome Abraham Lincoln impersonator Robert Costello to Ridgewood on Sunday, February 5
The Ridgewood Public Library and the Ridgewood Historical Society will jointly welcome Abraham Lincoln impersonator Robert Costello to Ridgewood on Sunday, February 5. Costello, who serves on the Board of the North Jersey Civil War Roundtable, is a member of the New Jersey Civil War 150th Committee, and is the resident Lincoln at the Lehigh Valley Historical Museum, has portrayed President Lincolnfor the past 10 years before audiences young and old, traveling throughout the tri-state area. Students in grades 3 through 12 and adults are invited to the Ridgewood Library auditorium to hear his talk on the presidency and the Civil War.
Ticket prices are $5 for adults, $3 for students, and $10 for families. Buy tickets at the Schoolhouse Museum during open hours or by mail, sending a self-addressed stamped envelope, an order form, and a check made payable to the Ridgewood Historical Society to The Schoolhouse Museum, 650 East Glen Avenue, Ridgewood, NJ 07450. Following Lincoln’s talk, the Schoolhouse Museum will be open to welcome ticket holders to see the Civil War Years: At Home and on the Battlefield exhibit.
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