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MyLife >> Thursday June 12, 2008
Grow up reading

The Bookstart Project aims to get youngsters interested in reading

ANJIRA ASSAVANONDA

Books are food for the brain and mind and are a source of life-long learning for children.

Throughout the years, parents have been told to encourage their children to read, and in fact, getting your child to read is not difficult.

"Children will love to read if the books they are given appeals to them. They will always find books interesting and fun," said Ruangsakdi Pinprateep, managing director of the Book for Children Foundation.

In 2004, the foundation launched the Bookstart Project, which encourages parents to get their children involved with reading since they are infants. About 106 families with babies, aged six to nine months, participated in the project.

The method is simple and easy. Parents only spend five to 15 minutes a day reading books to their babies. This not only induces the children's attachment to books, but also increases the bond between parents and babies.

Ruangsakdi explained how the process functions: "Infants get familiar to the sound of the mothers' heartbeat since they are in the womb. After they are born, they miss the familiar sound. Hearing their parent's voices therefore, responds directly to their needs. The babies will feel closer and warm with the parents' love.

According to Ruangsakdi, parents participating in the project are given a bookstart kit, which consists of six books - three are parental handbooks and three are illustration books.

The project was initiated in 1992 in the UK, where research found that children who participated in the project had the literacy skills three times higher than other children, when they entered kindergarten.

In Thailand, the study conducted among 106 participating families also showed positive results.

"When sent to the nursery, these children appeared to be well-prepared. They never cried and seemed to have emotional stability. Many times they became the comforters for their crying friends," said Ruangsakdi.

The study also confirmed that these children are sensible and have a better grasp of what is being said to them. Their vocabulary is vast and they learn more words quicker.

Besides, books help tighten the family bond. When parents and children read together, it improves the mental health of the families. Realising these benefits, parents also learned to devote more time to the children, playing and reading with them.


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