The New Zealand Herald

Kids never too young to be read to

Help parents access books for their children, study urges

- Simon Collins

It’s never too soon to start reading to your baby, a new study has found. The Growing Up in New Zealand study, which is following about 6000 children born in Auckland and the Waikato in 2009-10, has found that babies who were read to frequently at 9 months had better language and number skills at age 41⁄ 2.

On average, the 4-year-olds could name eight letters of the alphabet within one minute, but some could name all the letters while a third couldn’t name any.

Auckland 4-year-old Alexis McGregor, who can write all the letters, can never remember a time when her parents didn’t read to her.

“We read to them right from when they were tiny babies,” said her mother, Tessa McGregor. “We’ve got a photo of my husband reading to Alexis when she was only 6 weeks old.

“You can get those books that are designed for . . . tiny babies, they are almost black and white. They [babies] just focus in on them, it’s quite interestin­g for them.”

The study is believed to be the first in the world to investigat­e whether the determinan­ts of early learning success differ by ethnicity.

On average there are big ethnic variations. Children of Asian mothers can name an average of 14.7 letters in a minute by age 41⁄ 2, compared with 8.7 letters if the mother is European, 4.5 if she is Pasifika and 4.2 if she is Ma¯ori.

But those difference­s were largely due to the mothers’ education levels and the deprivatio­n ratings of the areas they lived in.

After controllin­g for those factors, the study found that the frequency of reading to the child at 9 months significan­tly increased the child’s learning at age 41⁄ across all four ethnic 2 groups.

University of Auckland educationa­l psychologi­st Dr Kane Meissel, the lead education researcher for Growing Up in NZ, admitted that the finding was “not very surprising”.

“If you teach related behaviours, then of course they’ll learn them,” he said.

“It’s something that doesn’t come readily for a lot of parents. It doesn’t necessaril­y come quite so readily if you haven’t learned those sorts of things yourself.

“So it’s about recommendi­ng that we provide support for parents to make sure that they do know how to introduce those kinds of things.”

Tessa and her husband, Campbell McGregor, had the advantage that three of their four parents were teachers, so they grew up with books and wanted to pass that on to their daughters, Alexis, 4, and Hannah, 2.

“I loved reading as a child,” Tessa said.

“I guess for us it’s more about getting them to have a love of books, and to have that for life.

“We think it will be really important for them from an educationa­l perspectiv­e, but also that we really want them to be able to enjoy reading. That’s something that I’ve had right from my childhood and my whole life, and I want to be able to give that as a gift to the children.”

The study also found that having more children’s books in the home at 9 months reduced the odds of the child being hyperactiv­e at age 2 across all ethnic groups, after allowing for the mother’s education and deprivatio­n levels.

A child having “conduct difficulti­es” such as tantrums at age 2 also reduced the odds of the parents spending time helping with reading, writing and numbers at age 4, and hence reduced early learning outcomes, for all groups except Europeans.

The study recommends parents can access culturally relevant children’s books.

 ?? Photo / Dean Purcell ?? Tessa McGregor reads to Hannah, 2, and Alexis, 4.
Photo / Dean Purcell Tessa McGregor reads to Hannah, 2, and Alexis, 4.

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