Reading by 9: Reading with your child is powerful. Here’s why you should do it more often
![Parent coach Alba Mariscal, middle, visits mother Ilse Ochoa, right, and ten-month-old baby Brianna de Leon, left.](https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/16287fd/2147483647/strip/true/crop/6720x4480+0+0/resize/1200x800!/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcalifornia-times-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F9f%2F4e%2F9cc64ca8426ebca7fb613d49679e%2F1338147-la-me-home-infant-home-visits-010-fo.jpg)
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From Raising a Reader
Reading books with your young child and telling stories together can reduce stress, strengthen family bonds and support your child’s social-emotional development. Reading together also helps your child develop vocabulary and learning skills necessary to thrive in school.
Sharing a book and stories with your child often involves snuggling, laughing and moments of one-on-one time, which gives you and your child both a chance to slow down and connect with each other. The predictability of a shared reading routine can provide a source of comfort during stressful periods in your lives. The warmth of your lap and hearing your voice helps build a healthy, secure bond which, in turn, develops your child’s self-confidence, self-regulation and self-respect.
Reading together also engages your child’s brain in a way that nurtures the skills they need to articulate and manage their emotions, often called, social-emotional development.
You can also use books and stories to help you and your child talk about difficult experiences or emotions. Seeing characters that have similar experiences and emotions is a positive way for your child to learn more about how to cope and manage their own feelings.