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Rebecca Joella is a professional development coordinator in CEHD’s Delaware Institute for Excellence in Early Childhood.
Q: What are your favorite summer books for children?
Joella: Summer by Alice Low, which chronicles fun summer activities like taking trips to the beach, eating watermelon and fishing, used to be our daughters’ favorite summer book. They are 20 and 16 now, but we still have it on our bookshelf. We read that book hundreds of times over the years! Beach Day by Karen Roosa, Summer Is by Barbara Pinke and Pete the Cat: Pete at the Beach by Micheal Bond are also great summer reads for early readers.
Any book that gets children excited and interested in reading fosters early literacy skills. Children becoming competent, lifelong readers is the goal. They need to learn skills to read well, but they first need to enjoy books. When children have people in their lives that expose them to books and reading at a very young age, they develop a love of reading that continues into adulthood.
Q: Educators often speak about the “summer slide,” referring to the regression of skills during the summer as kids are out of school. In addition to shared and independent reading, how else can parents and caregivers foster early literacy skills?
Golinkoff: Children from under-resourced families experience a far more profound drop in their academic development than those from middle class families who can afford to enrich their children by signing up for camps (some of which have academic leanings), going on trips to historical sites, visiting the library and requiring summer reading. This issue has been important to me for many years and it inspired, in part, my work on Playful Learning Landscapes. Since 2010, my partner Kathy Hirsh-Pasek and I have transformed everyday urban spaces into playful learning centers for children that foster literacy, STEM and spatial skills. For example, we transformed a park with a pop-up experience designed to showcase the science of how brains learn, morphed a bus stop into a playful learning plaza with the West Philadelphia Belmont Civic Association and mounted a life-sized human board game at the Philadelphia Please Touch Museum.
This summer also marks the two-year anniversary of our Stories with Clever Hedgehog project, which brings free, interactive e-books and activities to children and their families in partnership with the Jacobs Foundation and others. We developed the resource to support Ukrainian families displaced by the war, but all books and activities are offered in both Ukrainian and English and open to children around the world. Activities like the Playful Learning Landscapes or Stories with Clever Hedgehogs are designed to be accessible to all families and can help children develop important skills while they’re out of school.
To learn more about CEHD research on literacy and language, visit its research webpage.
This web page was created programmatically, to learn the article in its authentic location you may go to the hyperlink bellow:
https://www.udel.edu/udaily/2025/august/summer-reading-golinkoff-joella/
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This web page was created programmatically, to learn the article in its authentic location you…
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