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Sunday, 13 March 2022

VACHAN KEDI (STD 1 TO 8 reading material)

 



7 Benefits of Reading to Children

Whether you’re reading a classic novel or fairy tales before bed, reading aloud to children can significantly benefit your child’s life. Some benefits reading to children include:

  • Supported cognitive development
  • Improved language skills
  • Preparation for academic success
  • Developing a special bond with your child
  • Increased concentration and discipline
  • Improved imagination and creativity
  • Cultivating. lifelong love of reading

 

 

 

 

 

વાંચન કોશલ્યના વિકાસ માટે અહી વાંચન કેડીના ૧૨ ભાગ આપવામાં આવેલા છે.

આપના કક્કા વારી ક્રમ માં આવતા શબ્દો મુજબ સરળ થી કઠીન તરફ જતા શબ્દોનું અને વાક્યોનું વાચન કરાવવા માટે ખૂબ ઉપયોગી 

તૈયાર કરનાર – Zala Rajendrasinh Pratapsinh

 

 

 

VACHAN KEDI  – 1 (CLICK HERE)

VACHAN KEDI – 2 (CLICK HERE)

VACHAN KEDI – 3 (CLICK HERE)

VACHAN KEDI – 4 (CLICK HERE)

 

 

 

Reading daily to young children, starting in infancy, can help with language acquisition, communication skills, social skills, and literacy skills. This is because reading to your children in the earliest months stimulates the part of the brain that allows them to understand the meaning of language and helps build key language, literacy and social skills.

 

 

VACHAN KEDI – 5 (CLICK HERE)

VACHAN KEDI – 6 (CLICK HERE)

VACHAN KEDI – 7 (CLICK HERE)

VACHAN KEDI – 8 (CLICK HERE)

 

 

In fact, a recent brain scan study found that “reading at home with children from an early age was strongly correlated with brain activation in areas connected with visual imagery and understanding the meaning of language” 

 

 

VACHAN KEDI – 9 (CLICK HERE)

VACHAN KEDI – 10 (CLICK HERE)

VACHAN KEDI – 11 (CLICK HERE)

VACHAN KEDI – 12 (CLICK HERE)

 

 

 

These cognitive skills and critical thinking skills are especially important when you consider that, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics, more than one in three American children start kindergarten without the skills they need to learn to read. About two-thirds of children can’t read proficiently by the end of the third grade.




 

Furthermore, while a child will be able to latch onto vocabulary and language he or she hears around him or her, introducing reading into their auditory learning provides another benefit: it introduces the language of books, which differs from language heard in daily life. Whether it’s a children’s book or classic novel, book language is more descriptive, and tends to use more formal grammatical structures.

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