And make sure there are no toys or anything too distracting in the bedroom. |
At this age my DS who sounds very similar spent a ton of time listening to full length audio books while building with Legos. |
I agree. A lot of kids don’t like to read outside of school. It has to be enjoyable. The worst thing a parent can do is force boring books on these kids. Calvin & Hobbes, Garfield, Foxtrot are good choices for boys who have a sophisticated humor for their ages and big vocabularies. There’s a new comic strip called Cul de Sac that’s the same idea. I would bring my 9year old to the book store and he would go straight for the comic section. His reading skills were always 2-3 grades above his. He didn’t read chapter books for fun but his school chose excellent books for the students to read together so that was enough. He’s got a lot of company, don’t worry. |
Ivy & Bean books are sooo boring. My second grader liked to share the reading with me and we used voices for the characters. We started an Ivy & Bean and it was all I could do not to “lose” the book so I wouldn’t have to continue reading it. I know some kids love the books and I get it, just not for me or my daughter. |
| I would get him formally screened for ADHD. Mine went undiagnosed until my 30s because I was a studious, compliant kid. I could easily focus on things that interested me, but the amount of energy required to do the same when a subject was boring or difficult was enormous. I was exhausted at the end of every school day. |
I think it’s find to force a minimum amount of reading daily. In fact, I think you must if your child isn’t reading at all naturally by 3rd grade. |
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I haven't read all the replies yet, but what's helped with my kids is magazine subscriptions.
The kids get excited about new mail just for them and won't put the issues down even at dinner. National Geographic for Kids, The Week Jr., and Highlights have been hits with our kids |
| Two words: graphic novels |
Bad advice. These have hobbled a generation of kids. |
+1. They love getting the mail and they love the new facts. There’s even an online survey each week in The Week Jr that our 11 year old does on her computer now. I will preach this forever but i feel strongly that it does not really matter what your kid is reading as long as they are developing the habit of reading for pleasure. |
Totally disagree. I don’t like them either but if your kid gets to the point where they have a habit of carrying around a book, reading when they have downtime, it does not matter if they built that habit with graphic novels or something else. Your kid has become someone who reads for fun. They will eventually age out or run out of the graphic novels. |
I think these are fine to encourage pleasure reading. They are not appropriate for classroom study or for a book report. I make my kids choose a classic for their many book reports, but I am not policing their bedtime reading material. I say this as someone whose mom was so hands-off that I did book reports on Garfield books throughout elementary school (even though I was reading way more advanced material) because I didn't want to look like a showoff. |
| Graphic novels. Non fiction magazines. We have a ton of various magazines. Yes it's a page of text and not chapters but better start somewhere. |
| Graphic novels fool |
OP: I was a reader as a kid, my son reads before he goes to bed and that is it. He would prefer to hang out with friends, play his rec sport, or do a math competition then read. Reading is not a preferred activity. He has read graphic novels, comic series, fiction, non-fiction; all of it. He moved into chapter books before bed somewhere in 5th grade. He was capable of them well before then, he just wasn't interested. He is an 8th grader. He has an A in English, scores advanced on the SOL, and bounces between the 85th and 95th percentile on the iReady. He is at the high level of grade level to ahead in English. He just doesn't find reading a book or a magazine to be his choice activity. He would rather sit on the couch, staring at space. My DH is not a reader either. Both like to listen to audio books. It is fine for him not to be a reader, he is just different then you. Truth be told, I don't read much for fun any more. I read and write enough at work that I struggle to focus on a book at home. I listen to books during my commute. |