You are never too young to have your mother read you a book. Probably never too old, either, but in this case we're talking young.
Stepp and her husband, Alfred, have learned that from experience: The more you read to your kids, the better off they'll be. They'll listen better, they'll learn better, they'll have larger vocabularies, they'll focus more sharply.
An officer said: We're raising money to buy books for children aged 5 and younger who otherwise might not see any in their homes.The ones from reading households have learned to sit quietly and listen. They'll lean in, eager to hear what happens next.
Dalayna Stepp, 32, says that she was tardy in reading to her first two children, daughters Safiya, 13, and Sara, 11.
Stepp was a child herself when Safiya was born, and she didn't know how to do. But three or four years later, she learned about the benefits of reading — by reading a study — and made amends."I love math, science and reading," declares Sara, a fifth-grader who intends to become a doctor. She's using her library time to work on a story for a contest; it's about a couple of kids who venture into space and accidentally wind up in a black hole.
A few years ago, Stepp says, when Solomon was 5, he was having one of those days when he wished his sisters were actually in orbit.
The Stepps — and the books — were doing something right.
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