Summer Reading for All

FRE_logoofficialThis post is part of the PTA Family Reading Challenge Blog Party Challenge series. View the full post on “From Meredith to Mommy”.

We’ve been doing our summer schedule for almost a week now, and we’re just about getting used to it. The girls aren’t having a “crammed with camps” summer, but they’re also not having a “do nothing” summer, and that’s an adjustment for me. Madison has some sort of activity every day – a 30 minute sports clinics or a swimming lesson, and she’s in an intensive dance program that mimics her school year commitment. Reagan is taking lessons for the first time, and she’s keeping up with her gymnastics as well.

This is all great. Madison is thrilled to be back to dancing, and I love that they’re outside daily in the pool or on the tennis court, but it is definitely busy. We’re not keeping up with the school schedule we had over the year, and the girls are crashing at night, often before I even make it out of the room. When we do have down time, they’re reaching for the iPads. Most of those games are educational, but they’re not exactly what I’d like them to be doing with their time.

So yesterday Madison and I went through her room and made two piles of books. A pile that she can read to me, and a pile that I can read to her.

It’s fascinating what she put in the pile that I read to her. About a year ago I started reading the Little House books with Madison. We started with Little House in the Big Woods, and we read right through, stopping after The Long Winter (when Laura was a bit more grown up). After we stopped a few months ago, we moved into some other novels.

So it was surprising to me that in addition to the Rainbow Fairy and Never Girls and Magic Treehouse books that we’ve had sitting on the shelf, Madison added Little House in the Big Woods right back to the pile. I love that she’s already found the pleasure in re-reading an old friend, finding new things she missed the first time, getting excited as she anticipates her favorite parts.

Both girls are still at an age where they tear through their books at various times during the day, and we save the majority of the read aloud time for bed. But this summer, I think this might be our down time during the day – the moments when we need to sit in the shade and take a break from the running and swimming and dancing – instead of at night, when they can’t keep their eyes open to listen to an entire chapter.

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