Take Me Out to The Ball Game
Two weeks from now the family and I will be attending our first Cards game together. Besides having a chance to hang out and have fun with each other this trip is kind of special. It's special because my children earned the tickets by doing something that most people take for granted...reading.
Earlier in the Summer my Children signed up for the Summer Reading Program at their Local Library. One of the top prizes was a Laptop, which each of my children had their eyes set on. They thought it would be a much needed addition to their budding entrepreneurial dynasty. Still no word on the Laptop, but so far they have won quite a few prizes from the program. Prizes ranging from free food and drinks from the Local Sonics (yummy) and other Miscellaneous items such as pens, notepads, message boards and gadgets.
Since my children were toddlers I have been trying to instill in them the importance of reading. I can remember my daughter Emm tagging along with Junior and I to the Library. She was in kindergarten and he had just started the first grade. Junior was off to visit the Library and receive his very own library card. I wish I had a camera at the time to capture the disappointed look on Emm's face when she asked if she could get a card to...the Librarian told her that she needed to be able to write and sign her own name, and unfortunately she could not. Emm went home empty handed that day.
Immediately upon arriving home from the library she hunted down a pencil and some paper and began practicing writing her name. Two weeks went by and it was time to return the books to the library. I didn't think anything of it when Emm asked to tag along again. When it was time to check out, Emm asked the librarian about the card again. I thought that maybe she was thinking that the librarian would have changed her mind since she asked nicely, but she didn't the librarian gave her the same answer, she needed to be able to write and sign her name. I was shocked when Emm pulled out her pen and demonstrated to the librarian that she could write her own name. (She never was one to be undone by her brother) She had spent the entire two weeks practicing to write her name. She was grinning from ear to ear as she walked home with her own stack of books.
Since that time the youngest Mei Mei, has progressed into quite the reader herself, when I look around the house if I don't see her right away, I usually find her curled up with a pile of books. Their reading selections are actually pretty aggressive, and they have actually suggested some books to me that I have read and we have been able to have some pretty good family discussion over, most recently it has been the works of Patrick Carman, author of The Land of Elyon Series and The Atherton Series.
Taking the time to make sure my children were avid readers has probably been one of the best investments of my time. Things like winning baseball tickets just help reinforce all that I have been saying to them all along.
Earlier in the Summer my Children signed up for the Summer Reading Program at their Local Library. One of the top prizes was a Laptop, which each of my children had their eyes set on. They thought it would be a much needed addition to their budding entrepreneurial dynasty. Still no word on the Laptop, but so far they have won quite a few prizes from the program. Prizes ranging from free food and drinks from the Local Sonics (yummy) and other Miscellaneous items such as pens, notepads, message boards and gadgets.
Since my children were toddlers I have been trying to instill in them the importance of reading. I can remember my daughter Emm tagging along with Junior and I to the Library. She was in kindergarten and he had just started the first grade. Junior was off to visit the Library and receive his very own library card. I wish I had a camera at the time to capture the disappointed look on Emm's face when she asked if she could get a card to...the Librarian told her that she needed to be able to write and sign her own name, and unfortunately she could not. Emm went home empty handed that day.
Immediately upon arriving home from the library she hunted down a pencil and some paper and began practicing writing her name. Two weeks went by and it was time to return the books to the library. I didn't think anything of it when Emm asked to tag along again. When it was time to check out, Emm asked the librarian about the card again. I thought that maybe she was thinking that the librarian would have changed her mind since she asked nicely, but she didn't the librarian gave her the same answer, she needed to be able to write and sign her name. I was shocked when Emm pulled out her pen and demonstrated to the librarian that she could write her own name. (She never was one to be undone by her brother) She had spent the entire two weeks practicing to write her name. She was grinning from ear to ear as she walked home with her own stack of books.
Since that time the youngest Mei Mei, has progressed into quite the reader herself, when I look around the house if I don't see her right away, I usually find her curled up with a pile of books. Their reading selections are actually pretty aggressive, and they have actually suggested some books to me that I have read and we have been able to have some pretty good family discussion over, most recently it has been the works of Patrick Carman, author of The Land of Elyon Series and The Atherton Series.
Taking the time to make sure my children were avid readers has probably been one of the best investments of my time. Things like winning baseball tickets just help reinforce all that I have been saying to them all along.