Reading across age groups

Explore fun and practical tips for reading together with kids in different age groups, and find what works for your family!

Child-led

If your older child can read on their own, ask them to take a turn as the reader for younger siblings. This creates variety in your routine, and gives the older child a chance to practice skills and build confidence.

Take turns

Rotate who gets to choose the book. Encourage each child to share why they chose their pick.

Switch it up

Have each child choose a book they think another family member will enjoy, and ask them to share why they chose it.

Books everywhere

Keep a few books in different rooms, in your bag, or in your car, so reading can happen naturally when there’s a few spare minutes.

Tailored questions

Try asking each child different questions about the same book, based on their age. For a younger child, you might ask them to retell a certain part of the story. For an older child, you might ask how they would feel, or what they would do, if they were a character in the story.

A role for everyone

Give each child a fun job during reading time, like page-turner, picture-pointer, book-holder, or character-voice-chooser. This helps keep everyone engaged.

Shared languages

If your family is multilingual, ask one family member to read in your native language, and another to read in English.

Listen on the go

Try listening to an audiobook together while you’re in the car, or cooking dinner. This helps develop important literacy skills like listening comprehension.

Act it out

Ask your children to act out a particular part of a story. Encourage them to use voices, expression, or movement to bring the story to life.

Family connections

Look for books that are connected to something you’ve experienced together as a family, like a trip to the beach, a special holiday, or a day at the park. Ask your children to share their memories about the topic.

Change of scenery

Try reading together in a new setting, like outside with a flashlight, or in front of an “audience” of stuffed animals or toys.

Share a series

Look for a book series that you can read together as a family, to build shared interest in certain topics or characters’ stories. As you read, talk about how the characters change or stay the same throughout the series, or how they handle different situations.

If English is a second language for your family, read together with your multilingual child in your native language. Building vocabulary, oral language, and listening comprehension skills in a child’s first language supports the process of learning the same skills in English.

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