Q&A: reading with your child|Do you feel respected and welcomed at your child’s school?
The following are not relevant to the content of some reading with your child,But funnyEvery man should marry. After all, happiness is not the only thing in life.”Work fascinates me.” I can look at it for hours! ” Quit don’t quit. Noodles don’t noodles..Empty vessels make the greatest sound.。!!Reminded :Both parents should put the baby down for naps, feed her and change her. The more family resources she has, the more secure she will feel.
Question–: Do you feel respected and welcomed at your child’s school?
Parents are encouraged to become involved in their child’s school. Some forms of involvement are: participation in fund raisers, becoming a PTO member, reading to your child, helping with homework and attending parent / teacher conferences. However when I tried to be involved in the school I did not feel welcomed. I asked if I could volunteer in my child class. I wanted to have lunch with my daughter on Fridays.
The following is the answer: (Hint: The reader is not the correct identification.)
Answer by LoveSymbol
Hi, I’m a teenager but I think I can answer your question since I have a lot of family friends that are teachers and I’m involved in the school.
Parental involvement in schools are mandatory. They’re not allowed to not encourage parents to come. So even though they tell you to come, some teachers don’t really like that since some parents tend to be overly concerned about heir child.
Having lunch with your daughter on Fridays are great! But this is her time to be making other friends at school too! You being there may be awkward for othr children to talk to her. School is a time for kids to adapt to an environment with their parents. You can have as much mother-daughter bonding time as you want when school is done but I think the time at school should be spent with other children to help with your childs socialization skills.
Add your own answer in the comments!
reading with your child
About reading with your child,news book blog: healthy baby food & educating a baby.
The following not about reading with your child,but classicA bad beginning makes a bad ending.Never put off the work till tomorrow what you can put off today. Birth is much, but breeding is more..Don’t claim to know what you don’t know.。!!Health tips :Make play-time green-time with greener toys,Get back to basics and try old fashioned wooden toys and organic cotton or homemade teddies. Because babies put most things in their mouths,go as natural as possible.
Q&A–: Whatever happened to reading a book with your kid and running your finger along the words?
Just saw an ad for yet another electronic reader where it reads to your child. Why? Someone please explain to me why this is necessary. Are parents too busy these days to take 10 minutes and read a couple of books to their children?
The answer in the following: (Hint: The answer is not necessarily.)
Answer by Old Man Withers
because they are busy on their iphone
Answer by Welcome Isabella! March 30!
Unfortunately, the answer to your question is “yes”…yes, they are…
Answer by Chris Is Always Right
Child teaching, is getting ridiculous. Barney and Teletubbies were stupid. But they tried to teach something. These new shows are mindless gibberish. The parents are following suit, and thinking that one on one time with kids is pointless. As a child I read with my parents every night. I was always the best speller and reader. People are so lazy nowadays, It really saddens me, and I hope I do not become one of these parents when I get to the age.
Answer by 4Red
Any parent that can read books to their children should read books to their children.
These products do have a good purpose though. I teach elementary English Language Learners and these readers are great for them at home where they don’t have someone who speaks English…and they certainly can’t read it. At least one of our fathers has listened to many of the stories trying to pick up some language.
And yes, unfortunately we do have able parents that don’t give a rat’s behind and don’t take the time.
Answer by Jenn
Yep. And in exchange they are raising children with no imagination. Toys must do something. Heaven forbid you have to move a doll’s arm or make funny voices to make the stuff frog talk. It has to have a button and a motor or two. And there are parents out there that scoop it all up and wonder why they end up with a lazy teenager with no motivation or creativity…hmm…
It’s sad. But you and I and others have the power to change that. I’m still good with paper. (And deep inside when my daughter wants to read like thirty books every night before bed, I’m super proud. And just for that sometimes we say forget the bed time and keep reading till she just can’t keep her poor little eyes open anymore. What? I can think of worse ways to blow a bed time.)
Answer by Never Go Full Retard
we still read to our child…it would be Unforgivable as a parent not to in my book.
Answer by Oh my God! It’s Daniel!
Time is money, but it’s worth spending on your kids.
Answer by lovemyfamily
My daughter is only 7.5months old and we already read to her! usually anywhere from 3- 10books a day! some have stories, some just words (’red’, ‘cat’ ‘purple’ ect)
those electronic readers would be fun as a TOY not as a replacement parenting skill.
Unfortunately, to many people tend to use it as the replacement parenting skill =(
Answer by ~babyblue eyes~♥
People are too lazy to sit down with their kid and read a few books. I’ve read to my kids since they could sit up. We sat in their rocking chair with blankies and we read. They didn’t know what i was really saying, they didn’t understand, but i still read and rocked them to sleep. I read to my daughter and she’s 5. She has so many favorite books, and we look at the pictures and i set aside time for that. And she knows that. We don’t care if we are running close on bedtime, she can read 2 books every night and on nights when we get in bed early we can read 3 or 4.
People really confuse me sometimes, i don’t understand why reading to your kid is so hard to do.
Answer by Zuzu
My daughter is two and a half and only rarely to I run my finger along the word (it’s distracting to HER as well as me and it’s cumbersome in most of the books that we read.) I’ve been close to kids with learning disabilities and it’s exactly the kind of thing that helped them to learn to read. If my daughter demonstrates a disability (which she does not at this point) then I’ll certainly start doing that.
I don’t know what an electronic reader is, but I don’t have a television, which is where those kinds of things are advertised (I’m guessing.) I’m GUESSING that parents who buy things like that aren’t big readers themselves. In that situation, I suppose it’s better than nothing. If the parents read and enjoyed reading, I can’t imagine that they’d buy an “electronic reader.” So in that setting, maybe they’re trying to do something when they’d maybe otherwise not read to their children at all? I suppose that would be a “good” thing.
We read a lot in our house. She wakes up, gets out of bed, goes to the bathroom and pulls a few books off her bookshelf, tosses them up on my bed and climbs in. We start our day reading, read throughout the day, and end our days reading. I’d say I read no less than ten “stories” per day (sometimes it’s the same three stories over and over.. she’ll get to the end and say, “read it again!”)
A few of the books that we have came with CD’s where someone is reading the story. I HAVE experimented with using the CD with the books. In one instance (”Good Night Hawaiian Moon”) I find the CD distracting and detracts from the ability to read and interact with my daughter around the story. In another instance (”Lu and the Swamp Ghost”) I prefer the CD to my reading that story. While the CD is playing, I can point on and talk about artwork and interact more with the story. I don’t even both playing the CD for the Hawaiian Moon book, but I let her chose to have me read or have the CD played for the swamp ghost story (it’s nice, the original author is reading it and has a great accent.. helps to bring the story alive.) She usually chooses the CD. It’s only a couple of books where there’s even a CD available.. I certainly don’t seek them out, but I also don’t condemn them.. at least not since I had the better experience with the swamp ghost one.
So I’m guessing things like these electronic reader’s sell because some parents want their kids to have someone read to them and they don’t want to do it themselves, aren’t interested, don’t really value or enjoy reading and just can’t muster the energy – be it because they simply lack motivation or they’re exhausted from working a day job and managing a home. I’m a stay-at-home-mom… I’m not too busy to read.. we read a great deal.
What do you think? Answer below! Love of Reading begins at Birth
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About reading with your child,In the blog: ask a toddler and healthy food for children.
!!Health tips :At about six months, babies starts to eat real food. Rice cereal and mushy veggies turn to combinations of fish, meat, eggs, legumes, and vegetables—yep
Wonderful reading with your child:

Image by hcplebranch
Help your child develop a love of reading. Join any of our weekly storytimes.
THE READING MOTHER
by Strickland Gillilan
I had a mother who read to me
Sagas of pirates who scoured the sea.
Cutlasses clenched in their yellow teeth;
"Blackbirds" stowed in the hold beneath.
I had a Mother who read me lays
Of ancient and gallant and golden days;
Stories of Marmion and Ivanhoe,
Which every boy has a right to know.
I had a Mother who read me tales
Of Gelert the hound of the hills of Wales,
True to his trust till his tragic death,
Faithfulness lent with his final breath.
I had a Mother who read me the things
That wholesome life to the boy heart brings-
Stories that stir with an upward touch.
Oh, that each mother of boys were such!
You may have tangible wealth untold;
Caskets of jewels and coffers of gold.
Richer than I you can never be –
I had a Mother who read to me.
Infant Lapsit Program
Infants – 24 months
Wednesday @ 11:00 am,
Thursday @ 11:00 am,
and Friday @ 1:00 pm.
This program is free, and everyone is welcome to attend. Registration is not required.
Atascocita Branch Library
281-812-2162
19520 Pinehurst Trail Drive
Humble, Texas 77346
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pretty much yeah. i remember the teddy rumskin. it was a teddy bear that you put a tape in and it “read” you the story with it’s robotic moving mouth and freaky sounding voice. oh how i hated that thing.
my parents didn’t have lots of time to read to me and yet i was still read stories all the time. i was read whatever they were reading. the newspaper, the directions on how to make something (dinner), car manuals, and a host of other things.
i make sure i have time to read and chat with my kids. we have the leap frog readers for our little ones so they can read on car trips. and the older kids read their books. i love reading to the kids! its so fun to open up a dr. seuss book and read the classics on Christmas to them. i have recently started the Harry Potter books for my older kids and they love it! the quads think we are related to Harry Potter because our last name is Potter.
Wow, that just seems…ridiculous. I guess parents ARE too busy to even read their child a book these days. I know that I still read to my kids-running my finger along the words and all