Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine still reads daily, I always said yes to books and do not censor content which I think helped a lot. He started to want to read edgier books around age 12 and I kept my mouth shut. We keep a wide variety of books around the home and buy books from thriftbooks often. We model reading at home, though maybe not as much as we should. I am an elementary school librarian but that career change came after he finished elementary school so I don't think it's related.
What kind of edgy material?
Anonymous wrote:Mine still reads daily, I always said yes to books and do not censor content which I think helped a lot. He started to want to read edgier books around age 12 and I kept my mouth shut. We keep a wide variety of books around the home and buy books from thriftbooks often. We model reading at home, though maybe not as much as we should. I am an elementary school librarian but that career change came after he finished elementary school so I don't think it's related.
Anonymous wrote:No. During Covid, we had an online book club with three kids over Zoom for about 18 months when they were in 4th–5th grade. They read a new book and met with an online tutor/teacher we paid every two weeks to discuss it. They probably read close to 50 books.
Did they benefit? Absolutely. They learned to analyze books, discuss themes, defend opinions, and think critically about what they read. But did they become lifelong kids who voluntarily read constantly after the club ended? Unfortunately, no.
Two of the kids were my twins. They are smart kids, and I wish the habit of reading for pleasure had stuck more, but I don’t regret doing it. Even if the reading volume didn’t continue, the vocabulary, reading comprehension, and ability to analyze material stayed with them.
Anonymous wrote:They will bring Chromebooks home from school starting in 5th and all the schoolwork is digital. How can I keep them off of screens at home??
Anonymous wrote:Mine still reads daily, I always said yes to books and do not censor content which I think helped a lot. He started to want to read edgier books around age 12 and I kept my mouth shut. We keep a wide variety of books around the home and buy books from thriftbooks often. We model reading at home, though maybe not as much as we should. I am an elementary school librarian but that career change came after he finished elementary school so I don't think it's related.
Anonymous wrote:Keep them off screens as much as possible and social media entirely through middle school. It’s the only way you don’t lose the war.