Reading is a skill that everyone begins to learn when they enter elementary school or possibly before then at home. It’s necessary to learn to read to navigate life. Some children seem to love books, and others could do without them.

Every parent wants their children to read more, but before you force your child to sit alone for hours with a book, you should understand why they don’t want to read. Perhaps reading is too difficult for your child or they think it’s boring. It’s not uncommon to have children who aren’t interested in reading. That’s why it’s up to you to make reading exciting and enjoyable for your child.

After reading these clever ways to get your child to read more, you’ll see an increase in interest in reading!

1. Read to Them
Your child looks up to you. Anything you model, they’ll likely do. That’s why they need to see you both reading on your own time and reading to them or with them. Make sure your children see you reading. This will spark their curiosity, and they’ll want to read, too.

Also, read books to them. Especially if you have kids that can’t read, make it a habit to read at least one book every day to them. They’ll love hearing you bring the words to life.

2. Have Your Kids Listen to Audiobooks
Swap out their pop playlist for some audiobooks. Audiobooks certainly count as reading, and they’re a great way to get your child reading. Some children learn better by hearing, so listening or reading along with audiobooks will help them read more confidently.

If you’re headed for a long car ride, set up a playlist of books. They can practice reading while listening to someone else read.

3. Set Aside Regularly Scheduled Reading Time
To create a habit of reading, it’s best to set a regular reading time. Maybe it’s when the kids are done with school or right after dinner. Either way, keep the time consistent.

Encourage your kids to grab a book and read for an allotted time. If you’re just starting, keep it short. As they get into reading, you can increase the time.

4. Find Material for Their Age
If the books are beyond or not meeting your child’s reading level, they aren’t going to enjoy reading. Motivation to read will decrease when there aren’t any books that your child can read.

Most books have a reading level printed on them. If you’re unsure of the reading level, ask a librarian or your child’s teacher. They’ll help you find material that matches your child’s interests and reading abilities.

5. Create a Comfy Reading Nook
Who wouldn’t love a quiet, comfortable place to sit down and read? A reading nook is a special place in your house or even in your child’s room dedicated to reading. Set them up with a bookshelf, a comfortable pillow they can rest on, some blankets and a lamp.

Reading nooks also encourage independent reading. Your child can get away from distractions or annoying siblings by going to the reading nook and diving into a book!

6. Visit the Local Library
Get your child involved in the local library. Set them up with a library card so they can borrow books. It will save you money in the long run because you can borrow books instead of purchasing them.

Every time you go to the library, make it an adventure. Many libraries have activities for children, like storytime and games. Plus, your child can make new friends with other book lovers at the library.

7. Reread Books to Your Younger Children
Younger children can better develop their language development when you read the same thing over and over. They’ll become familiar with the pictures, page-turning and eventually realize that it’s the same book.

Choose books with fun story plots and rhyming. They’ll recognize the sounds of the words you’re saying and the repetition. Rhyming helps them remember and predict what word might come next.

8. Have Your Child Read a Recipe While You Cook
This tip will make your child read without them realizing you’re trying to get them to read more! Often, with recipes, you have to reread the ingredients and instructions over and over. This will help your child comprehend what they’re reading because they have to slowly read for you to understand what to do.

You can also read as your child makes a recipe. They’ll have to comprehend what you’re saying, which will help them read better.

9. Ask Others to Gift Your Child Books
Start building your child’s library early! If family members keep bugging you about what to get for your child’s birthday or Christmas, suggest books. You can never have too many books.

As your child receives books as gifts, they’ll realize that books are valuable. Your child will continue to grow in their interest in books, so they’ll be excited to get reading every time they receive a new story.

10. Offer a Variety of Genres
Every child has different things they like. Maybe you have a child who loves comedy. Perhaps the other child loves action and adventure. However, with books, you want to offer a variety of reading materials.

Children naturally gravitate towards fiction books. While fiction books are great, don’t limit them to only fiction. Add in nonfiction, biographies, cookbooks and children’s magazines.

By making reading fun, your child will begin to read more. They’ll love heading to their reading nook, picking a book from the library and even reading stories to their younger siblings. Encourage your little one to read starting now!

Kara Reynolds is the Editor-in-Chief and founder of Momish Magazine.  A mom of four and matriarch to her big blended family, Kara wants nothing more than to normalize differences in family structures.  She enjoys peeing alone, pancakes, and pinot noir - but not at the same time. 

It’s Girl Scout Cookie time! That is, it’s Girl Scout Cookie shoe time. K-Swiss is teaming up with the Girl Scouts of the USA for an all-new footwear collab.

The Girl Scout x K-Swiss Court 66 collection features sweet sneakers in three different Girl Scout Cookie-inspired designs: Thin Mints, Coconut Caramel, and Trefoils.

With a re-imagined Court 66 design, K-Swiss has transformed the brand’s beloved shoe into a cookie-licious super-sweet sneaker. The Thin Mint-inspired shoe is made from a minty green premium soft touch material, with matching green laces. If you’re more of a Coconut Caramel fan, check out the premium hairy suede shoe. This playful pick has soft-touch side stripes that mimic the cookie’s look!

If your fave Girl Scout Cookie is the Trefoil, the K-Swiss sneaker version has an embossed puffed cookie at the quarter of the shortbread-colored shoe.

You can score your very own pair of Girl Scout x K-Swiss Court 66 shoes at KSwiss.com, girlscoutshop.com, or Footlocker.com starting Mar. 1.

—Erica Loop

Photos courtesy of K-Swiss

 

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Check your freezer. Weis Markets has issued a recall of two different kinds of ice cream including more than 11,000 containers. The FDA posted an announcement over concerns the ice cream could contain extraneous material, specifically metal filling equipment parts.

Weis Ice Cream Recall

The ice cream included in the recall is 10,869 containers of Weis Quality Cookies and Cream Ice Cream and 502 bulk containers of Klein’s Vanilla Dairy Ice Cream.

There has been one report of a customer who discovered an intact piece of metal equipment in the Weis Quality Cookies and Cream Ice Cream (48 oz). There is also concern of an additional piece of equipment present in the ice cream product(s) possibly presenting a choking hazard.

The Weis Quality Cookies and Cream Ice Cream product has been removed from sale. It was sold in 197 Weis Markets’ stores in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, New Jersey, New York, Delaware and West Virginia.

The Weis Quality Cookies and Cream ice cream is packaged in a 48 ounce container with a UPC of 041497-01253 and with a sell by date of 10/28/21. This was produced on 10/28/2020 and released for sale on 10/29/2020. The sell by date is located on the bottom of the container.

Customers who have purchased this product may return it for a full refund.

The Klein’s Vanilla bulk ice cream is packaged in 3 gallon containers with a code stamp of 0302 and are not for retail sale. This product was sold to one retail establishment in New York and has been removed from sale.

Additional ice cream products packaged on 10/28/2020 include:

Klein’s Cookies and Cream Dairy Bulk – 665 containers

Nelson’s Graham Slam Bulk – 286 containers

These items are packaged in 3-gallon bulk containers with a code stamp of 0302 and are not for retail sale. They were stored in a warehouse and have not been distributed.

Customers requiring additional information may contact Weis Customer Service at 1-866-999-9347 Monday through Friday 8am-5pm EST.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: FDA

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Is Santa Real? This might be one of the questions we dread the most as parents. And when you have kids of varying ages, it can be a delicate balance between truth and spoiling it for the younger crew. So how do you answer when your kid wants to know if Santa Claus is real? We polled our community of moms to find out! 

Think On Your Feet

Mike Arney via Unsplash

Two years ago, a boy in my daughter's 3rd grade class told her that Santa isn’t real, it’s the parents, and to watch for more packages than usual being delivered leading up to Christmas. She told us about it, but didn’t 100% believe him. So I said, “Maybe he’s saying that because he’s been naughty and is afraid he won’t get anything.” Not sure if it totally worked, but she still believes and she’s 10.
–Jesseca S.

Recruit for the Team

iStock

Here's our answer: Santa is real, but just not in the way that you think. We all team up to create the magic of Santa and Christmas together. Mom and Dad do some of the work along with other people in the world, like the Santa at the mall. So, now that you're in on the secret you get to be on the team and create the magic for other people.
—Kate K.

The Secret of Santa

jill 111 via Pixabay

In our family, we have a special way of transitioning the kids from receiving from Santa, to becoming a Santa. This way, the Santa construct is not a lie that gets discovered, but an unfolding series of good deeds and Christmas spirit. When they are 8 or 9—whenever you see that dawning suspicion that Santa may not be a material being—that means the child is ready.

I take them out "for coffee." We get a booth, order our drinks, and the following pronouncement is made:

“You sure have grown an awful lot this year. Not only are you taller, but I can see that your heart has grown, too.” I point out 2-3 examples of empathetic behavior, consideration of people's feelings, good deeds etc, the kid has done in the past year.

“In fact, your heart has grown so much that I think you are ready to become a Santa Claus. You probably have noticed that most of the Santas you see are people dressed up like him. Some of your friends might have even told you that there is no Santa.  A lot of children think that, because they aren't ready to BE a Santa yet, but YOU ARE.”

Read what happens next in Leslie Rush’s family here. It’s genius!

Use the Force

jill 111 via Pixabay

Any time one of my kids indicates any level of non-belief I just tell them what my mother always told me, "if you don't believe, you don't receive." I think they are too terrified to risk it. I know that I was!  
—Kate L.

Deep Thoughts

Samuel Holt via Unsplash

When my daughter has asked if Santa is real, I ask her if she thinks he is real. She usually thinks about it & says yes. She's only five though so I know at some point that will stop working.
—Sarah F.

True Story

Jakob Owens via Unsplash

My sons are 5 and 1.5, so they haven't had the "is he real" thoughts yet. I think if they ever ask, I'll tell them that he was a real person a long time ago, and now everyone helps to keep his memory alive ♥️🎅
—Sarah C.

Pass It On

Toa Heftiba via Unsplash

When they got older I told them that Santa is about the spirit of Christmas and spreading joy and we are the ones that carry that on. They seemed to like that and they love that we take toys and donate every year to a shelter by us as a reminder that there are always people less fortunate.
—Karen C.

The real answer? There is no “right” answer. All kids are different and no two families alike. 

—Amber Guetebier

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Kiddos bored at home? Then it may be time to take the plunge with Minnidip’s new Holiday Collection that includes the brand new DiPP!T Inflatable Ball Pit.

Available for pre-order starting Friday, Nov, 20 at minnidip.com, measures 66″ wide and 14″ tall with scalloped edges. Made from velvet vinyl, the DiPP!T retails for $199 and comes with free shipping.

Customer can choose from three colors that include blush pink, cream and mint green. When you order a DiPP!T you’ll also get approximately 500 premium crush-proof 3” ball pit balls in a multitude of colors like blush, lilac, mint, peach, pearl, periwinkle and clear.

To make it even more fun, One ball—aka THE GOLDEN DiPP!T—comes in every box and can be used as a game ball!

Each material used exceeds children’s product safety standards for safe playtime. And bonus: the DiPP!T box can be used as storage and features a side that for kids to color.

You can pre-order the new inflatable ball pit on minnidip.com.

––Karly Wood

All photos: Courtesy of Minnidip

 

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Madi Blick

A #coacheswife and first time mama balancing a busy life during football season.

It’s football season and so as a coach’s wife, your life just became very hectic! Due to the long and grueling hours your husband spends at the office, you become #supermom doing all the things that the husband, baby and household demand. Luckily for us, when #GameDay arrives, we put on our loudest NFL attire and join those tailgating parties to celebrate our favorite team and another successful week of #momlife!

As a first time mama, I’ve tried to explore all of the best products to ensure our #GameDay experience is fun for everyone. A fussy, cold or tired baby makes for an unpleasant day, so here are a few of my must-have products that allow me to keep my sanity all the while enjoying my adult beverages!


1

Baby Banz Earmuffs

Protect Baby's Hearing!

$30

These noise-cancelling headphones are a must when the game is close and the fans are wild. They allow for nap time even during the game and they provide cushion and comfort for your little's ears.

BUY NOW

2

Babybjorn Baby Carrier One

Carry Your Beverage and Your Kid

$189.99

At any sporting event, there is typically a lot of walking without the luxury of carrying your stroller along. This baby carrier is comfortable, sleek and will save your arms when lugging your kid around.

BUY NOW

3

Love Your Melon Beanie

$25

Perfect for football weather! These beanies are warm and made from high quality material. Not to mention they offer collegiate styles and matching sets for Mom and Dad!

BUY NOW

4

Classic Radio Flyer Walker Wagon

The Ultimate Mini Tailgate

$79.99

This is a great walker as it builds confidence and balance with the resist push it offers. We bring it to the tailgate party and stash his toys in the back for the ultra mini tailgating experience!

BUY NOW

5

Fawn Design Diaper Bag

Modern Mama Diaper Bag

$169.99 BUY NOW

Perfect diaper bag for tailgating! It's stylish, yet comfortable and can be worn as a backpack. It has 12 pockets to hold everything, including your adult beverage!

Fall means warm sweaters, pumpkin spice and adorable new diaper prints from Hello Bello. Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard’s family brand has just launched several fun fall patterns. These adorable diapers will keep those baby booties stylish and dry all fall long. 

Hello Bello Fall

Timed to All Hallows Eve, these soft and stretchy diapers are decorated with patterns featuring candy corn, pumpkins, batts and ghosts – for kids of all sizes. The cute new designs of the diapers are made without lotion, fragrance, phthalates and latex making them hypoallergenic, eco-friendly and effective.

Hello Bello’s diapers are super soft, stretchy, snug and comfy. Stretchy side panels allow freedom of movement, while the diaper’s inner and outer layers are super soft, with a snug fit, for supreme comfort. Hello Bello’s diapers are made without lotion, fragrance, phthalates and latex making them hypoallergenic, eco-friendly and effective. Their cutting-edge, plant-derived absorbent core line is super absorbent to help protect against any leakage.

The soft, stretchy and super-absorbent diaper material is specially designed for supreme comfort to keep babies and parents happy. The super cute patterns are sure to bring a smile to your face.

Get the whole family in the Halloween spirit with Hello Bello’s cute Jack o’ Lantern Box that comes with each diaper bundle starting at just $65 for 7 packs of diapers on HelloBello.com. Customers can also get 20% off their first bundle + the Jack o’Lantern Box, plus choice of Halloween Diaper Designs using the code SPOOKY!

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Hello Bello

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We’re all hearing about bacteria these days, but if your kiddos are having a hard time understanding the complexities, a new resource from Microban is here to help. PTOToday is partnering with Microban 24 to offer the Microban 24 24-Hour Science Experiment, an educational resource to teach kids about the bacteria that live all around us.

The online resource is perfect for teachers and parents and offers a boatload of free material. Designed to take the guesswork out of teaching, parents can find downloadable worksheets, memory games, word puzzles and even a virtual lab tour.

photo: Courtesy of Microban

The Microban 24 24-Hour Science Experiment was created in partnership with School Family Media, microbiologists and medical experts. Parents can access three age-based science experiments that teach kids about bacteria in ways––and there’s even an opportunity to grow your own bacteria!

Each experiment includes a guide, video and supply list. Afterwords, head out on a fun virtual field trip to a real microbiology lab!

Check out the fun new resource right here.

––Karly Wood

Feature photo: Drew Hays via Unsplash

 

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For families dealing with rare and serious diseases, isolation, and not being able to learn or socialize alongside friends, is a year-round reality.

In spring 2020, COVID-19 flipped our world upside down. And now with back to school looking more like “back to the computer screen while mom and dad try to juggle remote working, too”, kids are missing out more than ever on their usual, IRL daily interactions with peers. Read on to learn how 10-year-old Naperville residents Olivia Donnelly and her mom Lisa make the best of their socially-distanced days and find connection when feeling separated from their once-upon-a-time, everyday lives.

Olivia was born with a rare and serious heart disease that called for multiple surgeries and two heart transplants. She spent months recuperating in the hospital and her family was forced to learn quickly how to socially distance to keep Olivia healthy, while also remaining connected with family, friends and community.

Start a socially-distanced book club. “Olivia has three close friends that we know and trust who did a book club together. The girls got together at each other’s houses in rotation over the summer. Each parent packed the girls with their own snack and beverage and we kept get-togethers at 1.5 hrs in length. They set up outside with appropriate distancing between one another. They were all ecstatic to see one another and we as parents were comfortable with the setting!”

Settle in for a Facetime movie night. “This has been big for us with any friend or family member that we cannot socialize with in person. Olivia even had a few Facetime movie nights with her friends where they all got in pjs and “watched” a movie together via Zoom; they were excited to giggle and interact as well as the bonus perk of extended bedtime.”

Make a mask fashion statement. Find masks that your children find attractive. “For our son (5yrs) that means finding masks that have Paw Patrol and Trucks/Cars on the material. Olivia likes fashionable masks that she can match with her outfits—she’s generally too cool for prints!

Make sure your mask fits comfortably. Make sure the mask fits well and doesn’t have any weird textures by asking yourself: would you want to wear the mask? How do the earloops feel? Is it too thick of material to wear outside during summer weather? You can find breathable materials that do not increase risks. The first time our 5-year-old wore his mask out, even though he understood the importance, we rewarded him with a little treat to ensure he felt good about the experience. He doesn’t fight wearing the mask now because he knows it’s his ticket to freedom outside of the house, no additional reward or treat necessary.”

Support a local restaurant with an alfresco, trunk-side picnic. “We miss eating out at restaurants, but we’ve tried to do takeout from our favorite places to show them support and keep that little family treat going. We’ve also headed to our local, favorite drive-thru a few times, and we parked and opened up the back of our car to eat al fresco, a.k.a. a ‘trunk picnic’.”

While Olivia’s heart condition has caused countless moments of uncertainty and fear, the Donnelly family has always relied on Ronald McDonald House Charities of Chicagoland and Northwest Indiana as a place to stay and get better together in between doctors’ visits and critical surgeries.

Families staying at Ronald McDonald House are feeling the same uncertainty we’re all feeling, with the additional and unimaginable stress of caring for a sick child. Consider donating today, to help keep families like Olivia’s together, families whose challenging times were already difficult. Your gift will help ensure kids have their parents by their side through treatment and recovery, right where they belong.

—Amy Bizzarri

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Over two thousand years ago the Buddha observed that “cravings” were the source of most of our suffering. (And he was pretty wise… like a Buddha, in fact!)

Basically, cravings cause us to chase after pleasure in material things, but this habit always ends in frustration and suffering, as the happiness they offer is fleeting and ungraspable.

I was recently reminded of this as we loaded a mini-van full of toys to donate to the Salvation Army in a struggle to declutter.

These toys were an archive of must-have toys from Christmases past, and most didn’t get much love after the New Year.

In fact, our kids had a bad habit of getting a “pleasure-hangover” after the last toy was opened on Christmas morning. Their moods seemed to sink after the cravings and anticipation turned into discontent, often before we could clean up the wrapping paper.

So, after a number of these unsatisfying Christmases, we got wiser. We stopped spending hundreds of dollars on “things,” and don’t even participate in the commercial bacchanal that is “Black Friday.” (ugh!) 

So, what do we do instead? 

Now we get the kids an experience

Our big gift to the kids usually centers around an event, and includes a night in a hotel. Since we’re a train ride from NYC, there’s no shortage of options for family travel, but certainly anywhere fun and exciting will do.

For the last two Christmases we’ve been on a Hamilton (the Musical) kick, so trips to Williamsburg and Philadelphia were a lot of fun. One year it was a long-weekend trip to Florida after we found cheap, last-minute airfare.

This year? Not sure yet. Maybe (half-price) tickets to Aladdin on Broadway, and a night in the city?

We usually make a photo book of our annual adventure, so that’s fun to bring back the memories years later.

Anyway, what I’m trying to say is that we’re all so much happier not dumping “stuff” on each other on Christmas day. We all feel lighter, and there’s a lot less anxiety.

The True Meaning of Christmas

“Sure, Charlie Brown, I can tell you what Christmas is all about…”

Yes, I think Linus was onto something back in 1965.

We’ve all heard that “money can’t buy happiness,” but we’re also told ad nauseam every day that it can.

How? Well, in the form of advertising and social media, of course.

In fact, a recent study shows that we can be bombarded with ads of some sort up to 5,000 times a day. This exposure to advertising is like steroids for our cravings, and that is really bad.

Ugh! If he weren’t so enlightened, Buddha would be so depressed.

Proof that Toys Don’t Buy Happiness (Ah, hah!) 

I’m happy to give you proof that “things” don’t equal happiness. Wrap your brain around this statistic:

You’d think that as the richest country with the most toys, we’d at least be on the list of the 10 happiest countries, but we’re not.

However, we do top the charts in anxiety and obesity, and debt, so maybe we want to stop trying to satisfy our cravings with “things.” 

This obsession with consumption seems to be a human sickness, maybe leftover from our ancient hunter-gatherer DNA? Kind of makes you think that the Buddha was right all along.

Here’s a small way to fight back…

Give An Experience this Christmas!

So, I hope that you consider lightening up on the toys this Christmas. Maybe a Broadway show isn’t in your budget this year, but no problem; it’s the quality time together that matters. 

If you have any ideas of non-material gift substitutes, leave a comment below!

I'm Missy, a mother of three and a middle school drama teacher at a private school. I'm obsessed with my Vizsla (dog), traveling, and the musical Hamilton. I also enjoy writing and sharing fun parenting stories, which is what brought me here.