Wednesday, May 4, 2016

The Importance of Reading to Newborns


            Many hold the belief that reading to a newborn stands as simply unnecessary and absurd. Some may ask, “How can something as complex as reading matter to a newborn baby?” While others pose the question, “Is it not simply a waste of time to read to a newborn?” However, reading to a newborn presents itself as one of the greatest benefits one can give to a child. Reading to a newborn brings success by increasing their intelligence, strengthening their relationship, and developing their imagination.

            The intelligence of a newborn increases by broadening their range of vocabulary, recognition, and learning. A newborn who receives the privilege of a parent reading to them obtains a greater vocabulary. This stems from the higher extent of time spent retaining words in their brain. Reading not only boosts their range of vocabulary, it also culminates their ability to recognize the basics of literature. “Davis psychology Professor Linda Acredolo stated, ‘Settling in for frequent story times will also introduce her to the basic concepts of literacy. As you read, she’ll begin to grasp that the letters on the page have meaning and that they must be read from left to right.’”[1] When one reads to a newborn, they enable a higher level of learning to engulf the child. A child who reaps the benefits of time spent in reading versus a child who suffers the loss of time spent in reading reaches a vastly different amount of total hours by the time that child reaches age five.[2] Due to the fact that a newborn learns primarily through sight and audio, a newborn’s speaking, recognizing, and learning abilities greatly benefit from parents who read to them.

            Taking the quality time to read to a newborn gives way to the vitally important bonding relationship. Without a strong parent-child bond, the newborn lacks the capabilities of reaching their full development. “Secure early bonding is the difference between the baby that grows up a secure, emotionally capable adult, and a baby that will become a depressive, anxious child, who will not cope well with life’s ups and downs.”[3] Through reading, one can relay the message to the newborn that you care about them and desire to spend quality time with them. Thus, reading to a newborn establishes an earlier and greater parent-child bond.

            Reading to a newborn creates a broadened realm for their imagination to develop and to reach its full potential. Though a newborn lacks the capability of detecting certain things right away, reading opens doors to things they would not otherwise obtain. It builds a strong foundation on which they can create thoughts that would otherwise not exist as possible to create. Newborns who achieve the privilege of listening to books generally embrace a greater imagination due to the broadened realm of thought presented to them.
            Reading to a newborn brings success by increasing their intelligence, strengthening their relationship, and developing their imagination. The newborn receives the blessing of a stronger foundation to build upon in his later years. By listening to their parents read from the beginning of their days, newborns obtain a higher chance of succeeding throughout the remainder of their life.


[1] Heidi Reeves, “Activities to Boost a Baby's Intelligence,” Live Strong, September 3, 2015, accessed May 2, 2016, http://www.livestrong.com/article/121649-activities-boost-babys-intelligence/.

[2] “Raising Readers,” Archived Information, accessed May 2, 2016, https://www2.ed.gov/pubs/startearly/ch_1.html.


[3] Andrea Leadsom, “Why Secure Early Bonding Is Essential for Babies,” The Guardian, September 12, 2012, accessed May 2, 2016, http://www.theguardian.com/social-care-network/2012/sep/12/secure-early-bonding-essential-babies.