Guides
Advice, activities, and research for parents and teachers on raising readers.
When someone dies, you won't know what to say. That's okay. Here's what the experts recommend, and the books that say it when you can't.
The jump from picture books to chapter books isn't about reading level. It's about stamina, interest, and the right book at the right moment.
Silence about race isn't neutral. It's a message. Here's how to have the conversation. with guidance from the people who've been having it their whole lives.
Your kid says they hate reading. They don't. They hate the reading they've been given. Here's how to change the menu.
Your kid's stomachache before school isn't a stomachache. It's anxiety wearing a disguise. Here's what the experts say to do about it.
Board book, picture book, early reader, chapter book, middle grade, YA. what's the difference, and when does your kid move from one to the next?
The science of reading revolution has made "decodable" the most-searched word in early literacy. Here's what it means and whether it matters for your child.
Divorce rearranges everything a kid knows. The house, the routine, the people at the dinner table. Here's how to help them hold the pieces.
Bullying isn't a rite of passage. It's a pattern that adults can interrupt. if they know what they're looking at.
Every kid learns to read on their own schedule. Here's a rough map of the terrain so you know where you are and where you're headed.
A move is a loss, even when it's a good one. Here's how to honor what your child is leaving behind while helping them face what's ahead.
Your kid's teacher said they're a "Level J." The book says "Lexile 420." The library has "DRA 18." Here's what any of it means.
Reading aloud is the single most effective thing you can do for your child's brain. It's also free, requires no expertise, and takes fifteen minutes. Here's how to do it well.
You're adding someone to the family. Your first child is about to lose their position as the center of the universe. Here's how to make that transition survivable.
Bibliotherapy is a clinical word for something parents do instinctively: reaching for the right book when a kid is going through something hard.
When a parent gets sick, kids feel it before anyone tells them. Here's how to tell them. honestly, gently, and without pretending everything is fine.
Your child has questions about gender. their own or someone else's. Here's how to answer with honesty, love, and books that show every kind of kid.
Your child saw something on the news. Or heard something at school. Or walked past a TV at the wrong moment. Here's how to talk about it.
Every adopted child carries questions. The answers you give. and the ones you don't. shape how they carry them.
Your child noticed someone in a wheelchair. They're staring. They're about to ask a question loudly. Here's what to say instead of "shh."

Your kid won't read to you. They won't read to their sibling. But a golden retriever who sits there panting and looking impressed? Thirty minutes, easy.

Hand a kid a flashlight and a book, turn off the lights, and tell them they can stay up ten extra minutes if they read under the covers. You've just turned read…

Blankets draped over chairs, a pile of pillows, fairy lights if you've got them, snacks if you're feeling generous. The fort isn't about reading, it's about cre…

Read a picture book aloud, but do the absolute worst, most ridiculous voices you can manage. Squeaky villain. Grumpy narrator. Every character sounds like they …

Stop reading at the most exciting part. "Okay, that's it for tonight." Watch what happens.

Take books outside. A blanket, some snacks, a stack of library books or whatever's on the shelf. That's the whole plan.

Your fourth grader wants to reread Captain Underpants for the ninth time. Let them.

Audiobooks are not cheating. Say it again for the parents in the back.

Read a book together, then watch the adaptation, then talk about what changed. Congratulations, your kid is now a film critic and a literary analyst, and they t…

Not the adult kind with wine and pretending you finished the book. The kind where everyone, parents included, reads the same picture book and then argues about …

Not a book report. A book journal. The difference is that no one grades it, it's not for school, and your kid can use it however they want.

A library trip isn't an errand. It's a treasure hunt with no wrong answers.

Read a book where food shows up in the story, then make it together. Green Eggs and Ham. The pancakes from If You Give a Pig a Pancake. Turkish Delight from The…

Let the kid hold the book. Let the kid turn the pages. Let the kid "read" to you, even if they're making it up from the pictures (which, for pre-readers, is exa…

Pair an older kid with a younger one for reading time. The older kid reads aloud, the younger kid listens. Everyone wins.

Pick the funniest book you can find. Read it aloud. See who cracks first.

A 2024 longitudinal study from Singapore tracked children from infancy to adolescence and found something remarkable: parent-child reading at age three signific…

Children who are read to daily from birth enter kindergarten having heard an estimated 1.4 million more words than children who weren't. That gap, measured in a…

Bibliotherapy, using books to help children process difficult experiences, isn't folk wisdom. It's a clinical practice with decades of peer-reviewed research su…

A 2025 brain imaging study found that children's brains function measurably differently during book reading versus screen time, with book reading activating reg…

Reading literary fiction activates the same brain networks we use to understand real people's mental states. Researchers call this "theory of mind", the ability…

Bedtime reading isn't just a nice routine, it's one of the highest-impact parenting practices available. Research links nightly reading to improved sleep qualit…

In 1990, scholar Rudine Sims Bishop introduced a metaphor that transformed how educators think about children's literature: books are mirrors, windows, and slid…

When you buy a book through Wonderlit's Bookshop.org links, 10% of the sale goes to an independent bookstore. That's not a marketing decision, it's a values dec…