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Top Tips on Reading with Your Baby Coventry

To a young baby, ‘reading’ means a special cuddle on mum’s lap, exploring a soft book. Hold baby snugly in the crook of one arm, facing outwards. Use the same arm to hold the book, keeping one hand free to turn the pages. Start reading with a contented three month old baby, in a quiet place. Let your baby wave the book about, even taste it!

WHSmith
+44 (0) 845 604 6543
Smithford Way
Coventry
Forbidden Planet
+44 (0) 2476 229672
31 Cross Cheaping
Coventry
St. Andrew's Bookshop
+44 (0) 2476 267070
Priory Street
Coventry
Waterstone's
+44 (0) 2476 887580
Gosford Street
Coventry
Waterstone's
+44 (0) 2476 634224
50-52 Smithford Way
Coventry
Publishers Book Clearance
+44 (0) 2476 228224
Smithford Way
Coventry
Waterstone's
+44 (0) 2476 227151
Broadgate
Coventry
Wesley Owen Books & Music
+44 (0) 2476 222064
21 City Arcade
Coventry
The Works Bookstore
+44 (0) 2476 633360
21 Hertford Street
Coventry
Catholic Repository
+44 (0) 2476 225055
236 Stoney Stanton Road
Coventry
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Top Tips on Reading with Your Baby

By  Justine Smith Supernanny Expert 13/05/2008

1. To a young baby, ‘reading’ means a special cuddle on mum’s lap, exploring a soft book. Hold baby snugly in the crook of one arm, facing outwards. Use the same arm to hold the book, keeping one hand free to turn the pages.

2. Start reading with a contented three month old baby, in a quiet place. Let your baby wave the book about, even taste it!

To babies, books are like toys and reading is play. Respond to your baby’s babbling in an exaggerated way - babies can hear individual sounds and copy them if they are distinct.

3. Once your baby sits up, choose light, sturdy board books with rounded corners, bright pictures and textures to feel. From 6 months, babies love lift-the-flap books. From nine months, introduce noisy sound books. Be guided by what makes reading fun for you both.

4. Use the pictures as well as the words. Babies learn by doing: put their hand to the pictures and say the words to help build vocabulary. Try asking questions about the pictures and answering them, with a fun, lively voice.

5. If older babies get wriggly, try physical play. Be relaxed about what books mean to a baby - a five minute bouncy sing-song game with an open book is still reading!

6. Find the books you like too - you’ll be reading them over and over again! Routine and repetition will make babies feel confident about participating. When toddlers happily tell you what’s coming over the page – they’re reading!

Justine Smith Supernanny Expert

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