You can turn regular household chores into opportunities for learning. Here are some ideas.
You could ask children to:
read recipes, measure ingredients, compare foods, and learn new words such as names of spices
sort items of clothing for the laundry according to color, read washing instructions, measure detergent, and time wash cycles
write shopping lists, compare prices, make change, and identify and classify food items
sort pictures for photo albums, write labels or captions for each photo, and write a newspaper article about a photo
sort items in a “junk drawer”, label them, and arrange them alphabetically.
Fifteen-Minute Reading Activities
by the National PTA
Make 15 minutes go a long way. Try these quick reading activities with your younger kids.
1. License to read. On car trips, make it a game to point out and read license plates, billboards, and interesting road signs.
2. Better than TV. Swap evening TV for a good action story or tale of adventure.
3. Look and listen. Too tired to read aloud? Listen to a book on tape and turn the book's pages with your children. You'll still be reading with them!
4. Labels, labels, labels. Label things in your children's room as they learn to name them. Have fun while they learn that written words are connected to everyday things.
5. Pack a snack, pack a book. Going someplace where there might be a long wait? Bring along a snack and a bag of favorite books.
6. Recipe for reading. The next time you cook with your children, read the recipe with them. Step-by-step instructions, ingredients, and measurements are all part of words in print!
7. Shop and read. Notice and read signs and labels in the supermarket. Back home, putting away groceries is another great time for reading labels.
8. Your long-distance lap. Away on a business trip? Take a few books with you, call home, and have your child curl up by the phone for a good night story.
9. A reading pocket. Slip fun things to read into your pocket to bring home: a comic strip from the paper, a greeting card, or even a fortune cookie from lunch. Create a special, shared moment your child can look forward to every day.
10. A little longer? When your child asks to stay up a little longer, say yes and make it a 15-minute family reading opportunity.
Reading with your child helps them learn that reading is important!