Book Read Free

The Enchanted Hour

Page 29

by Meghan Cox Gurdon


  on grisly illustrations effect on her as a child, 164

  MRI observation, 4, 223n4

  Rashid family reading experiment, 195–97, 212–15

  and Rivendell remembrance, 56–57

  Wall Street Journal children’s book critic position, xix

  Gurdon, Molly, 2–3, 101, 126–27

  Gurdon, Paris, 65–66, 127–28, 203

  Gurdon, Phoebe, 81–82, 101–2, 135, 161

  Gurdon, Violet, xix, 101–2

  Guroian, Vigen, 138, 153–54

  Haas, Irene, 205–6

  Handy, Bruce, 53–54

  Hansel and Gretel (retold by Endora on Bewitched), 171–72

  The Happy Lion (Fatio), 55

  Harrogate, North Yorkshire, 29

  Hartwell-Walker, Marie, 87

  Head Start study of children’s emotional regulation ability, 80–81

  Heffernan, Virginia, 41–42

  Hepworth, Amelia, 47

  Higgins, Paul, 186

  Hillman, James, 118

  Hillyer, Virgil, 174–75

  Hinton, S. E., 131–32

  Hirsch, E. D., 110

  historical perspective

  art history books, 161–63

  in A Child’s History of the World (Hillyer), 174–75

  current moral objections to past attitudes, 167–68

  in A History of Reading (Manguel), 24–25

  recognizing the importance of the past, 148–51, 167–71, 246n168

  A History of Reading (Manguel), 24–25

  Hoban, Russell, 54–55

  The Hobbit (Tolkien), 56

  Hoffman, Heinrich, 164

  Holmes, Dwight O. W., 138–39

  Homer

  The Iliad, 22–23, 25, 27–29

  The Odyssey, 21–23, 25, 38–39, 149

  Hornik, Lauri, 181, 210

  Horst, Jessica, 102–4

  hospitalized parents, reading to, 178–79, 192

  The House of Sixty Fathers (DeJong), 55

  “How Reading Books Fosters Language Development Around the World” (Dickinson et. al), 81

  human nature, exposing dualities of, 137

  Humans Are Underrated (Colvin), 47

  The Hunger Games (Collins), 60

  Hunters in the Snow (Bruegel), 163

  Hurd, Clement, 1–3, 101, 159

  Hurston, Zora Neale, 138–39

  Hutton, John

  biographical info, 5

  on development of a child’s brain, 7

  fMRI research on children, 7–9, 11–14

  Sleepy Solar System, 6

  Ibatoulline, Bagram, 101

  The Iliad (Homer), 22–23, 25, 27–29

  The Iliad (retold by Cross), 56, 171

  illiteracy, 17, 26, 33–34, 35, 226n17

  illustrators, 158–64. See also names of illustrators included in Read-Aloud Books Mentioned in The Enchanted Hour

  I Love You to the Moon and Back (Hepworth), 47

  imagination, 8–9

  incarcerated parents, 61–62

  Indiana University, Bloomington, study of children’s vocabulary based on conversations versus read-aloud time, 98–99

  Indian storytellers (sutas), 24

  Innocenti, Roberto, 203

  interactive and dialogic reading, 1–3, 92–93, 105–8, 112, 197, 241n112

  Irresistible (Alter), 204

  Irving, Washington, 54

  The Island of the Blue Dolphins (O’Dell), 111, 124

  Italian Renaissance evoked in picture books, 162

  “Jabberwocky” (Carroll), 125–26

  Jackson, Shirley, 69

  Jacques, Brian, 94

  James and the Giant Peach (Dahl), 136–37

  Japanese language, 70

  Johnny Tremain (Forbes), 135

  Johnson, Thomas, 140

  joint attention, 79, 81–83, 198

  Jones, Sarah “Miss Sarah,” 5–6

  Journey into the Whirlwind (Ginzburg), 140–41

  Keats, Ezra Jack, 158–59

  Kendle, Candace, 16–17

  Khan, Linda, 177–79, 192

  The Killer Angels (Shaara), 192–93

  Kirke family adapts to military deployment, 59–60

  Klass, Perri, 83–84, 199

  Koenig, Sarah, 132–33

  Kubla Khan (Coleridge), 139

  lady of the castle metaphor, 94–95

  languages

  and ability to succeed, 96–100

  learning a foreign language, 70learning English as an infant, 71–72, 71–75, 76–79, 234n71

  Mandarin Chinese, 77

  Russian 3-year-old learning English, 87–89

  Lawson, Robert, 155–56

  “Learning on Hold” study of effect of cell phone interruptions on child-parent time, 198

  Lemov, Doug, 110–11

  Lessing, Doris, 182–84

  Lewis, C. S., 55, 147–48

  liberated word, 25–26

  liberation from reading, 138–44

  life expectancy increase from reading, 187

  The Light in the Forest (Richter), 66

  Lindgren, Astrid, 54

  The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (Lewis), 55

  literacy skills

  brain networks for, 11–14

  cultural literacy, 151–55, 157–58, 161–62, 167–71

  illiteracy vs., 17, 26, 33–34, 35, 226n17

  learning new words by association, 110, 151–53, 155

  read-aloud time as a continuum of, 30–31, 130

  recognizing the importance of the past, 148–51, 167–71, 246n168

  Little Eagle (Chen), 162

  The Little Prince (Saint-Exupéry), 155, 217–18

  Little Red Riding Hood (Perrault), 146–47, 153–54, 244n147

  Little Town on the Prairie (Wilder), 170

  Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, 185–86

  The Long Winter (Wilder), 32–33

  Looking at Pictures in Picture Books (Doonan), 166

  lotus-eaters metaphor, 38–39

  The Maggie B (Haas), 205–7

  The Magic Horse of Han Gan (Chen), 162

  The Magician’s Book (Miller), 169

  Mahabharata (Sanskrit poem), 23

  Manguel, Alberto, 24–25, 33–34, 124

  Mansbach, Adam, 86–87

  mapping a language, 71, 102–4

  Marshall, Sybil, 118

  Martinez, Saturnino, 33

  math skills and school readiness, 16, 225n16

  Matthew effect, 96

  Mayer, Mercer, 157–58

  McBratney, Sam, 47

  McGough, Roger, 19

  McKee, David, 101

  McWhorter, John, 148, 244n148

  The Merry Chase (Hurd), 101

  Micklethwait, Lucy, 161–62

  Milgrim, David “Ann Droyd,” 41

  military parents, 58–61

  Mill, John Stewart, 174, 246n168

  Miller, Laura, 27, 169

  Milton, John, 126

  Mitchell, Margaret, 141–42

  Mitchell, Stephen, 101

  Moby-Dick (retold by Wang brothers), 157

  Mohlenbrock, Betty, 60

  Monaco, Taylor, 60–61

  Morgan Library, New York, 145–47

  Morpurgo, Michael, 149

  Morse, Katrina, 47

  movies, 128–30, 242n129

  MRI (magnetic resonance imaging)

  child’s experience of, 4, 7, 223n4

  research on children, 4, 5, 7–8

  research results, 8–9, 12–14

  Munsch, Robert, 11

  Murphy, Mary, 47

  Murthy, Vivek, 189

  Museum of Modern Art, New York, 160

  Mutiny on the Bounty (Bligh), 55

  myths and legends, 155

  Nabokov, Vladimir, 181–82

  Nadella, Satya, 122

  Native American storytellers (shamans), 24

  Neller, Robert, 58

  Nelson, Charles A., 73

  Nelson, Chris
tine, 145, 146–47

  neural coupling, 47–48

  Newman, Judith, 65

  New York University study of parents’ use of wordless picture books, 157–58

  Nielsen Book Research, 18

  Nolan, Claire, 48–49

  Nolan, Dale, 48–49

  Nolan, Tyrone, 48–49

  nonfiction, social-emotional effects of fiction vs., 187, 248n187

  Northwestern University study of videos claiming to teach infants, 75

  Not Now, Bernard (McKee), 101

  nursery rhymes and songs, 151–53

  O’Dell, Scott, 111, 124

  O’Donohue, John, 151

  The Odyssey (Homer, Fitzgerald, trans.)

  first lines quoted, 21

  knowledge imparted by, 149

  multiple translations of, 25

  rhapsodes telling from memory, 21–23

  sailors eat the honey-sweet lotus, 38–39

  The Odyssey (retold by Cross), 56

  OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development), 226n17

  The Old Curiosity Shop (Dickens), 29–30

  Oliver, Alison, 156

  Olson, Walter, 87–89, 123–24

  “Once upon a time . . .,” 21, 26–27

  Ondaatje, Michael, 177, 180

  oral storytelling, 20, 21–26, 29

  Oregon State University study of attention-span persistence, 122–23

  Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), 226n17

  orphans in Romania, 73

  orphans in Russia, 88

  Our Kids (Putnam), 15

  Outside Over There (Sendak), 162

  The Outsiders (Hinton), 131–32

  Paglia, Camille, 172

  Paradise Lost (Milton), 126

  parenting

  an autistic son, 63–65

  challenge of reading every day, xviii, 18–19, 108–9, 202–3, 204–6

  and child’s school readiness, 15

  choosing reading material, 19

  conversations with your child, 98–99, 104–8, 166, 172

  effect of cell phone interruptions during child-parent time, 198

  entering storytelling mode, 200–205

  incarcerated mothers, 61–62

  military parents, 58–61

  Russian 3-year-old boy, 87–89

  shifting from perfect to fallible as your child grows up, 211–12

  and smartphones, 43–46

  starting a read-aloud tradition, 200

  using wordless picture books to pass on culture, 157–58

  See also read-aloud time

  Parents magazine, 74

  Parsons, Kelly, 102–4

  Patterson, James, 134

  Peek-a-Boo! (Ahlberg and Ahlberg), 67–69

  Pennac, Daniel, 124

  Pennsylvania State University study of technoference, 44

  Perrault, Charles, 146–47, 153–54, 244n147

  Persian-influenced picture books, 162

  phenomes, 152–53

  Phidias, 174–75

  picture books

  overview, 98–100, 106–7, 158–60

  as adhesive for families, 53–55, 76–79, 80

  and aesthetic senses development, 85–86, 165–68

  biographies, 150

  close looking, 165–66

  connecting children to art, 160–61, 166

  for developing empathy, 84–85

  dialogic reading built into, 107–8

  technological substitutes, 10–14, 74

  using wordless books to share cultural wisdom, 157–58for vocabulary development, 103–4

  See also children’s books; read-aloud time

  Pinker, Susan, 45–46, 47, 49

  Pinocchio (Collodi), 203

  Pip and Posy (Scheffler), 100

  Pippi Goes on Board (Lindgren), 54

  Pippin, Steve, 87–89

  Plutarch, 25

  podcasts, 36, 37, 132–33

  poetry

  “the Bard” tournament, 27–29

  benefits of memorizing, 22

  children’s discovery of, 85, 153

  effect of, 126, 187–88, 191–92

  Kubla Khan (Coleridge), 139

  in prison cell in the Soviet Union, 140–41

  Potter, Beatrix, 107

  premature babies, reading to, 48–49, 50–53, 232n50

  Pride and Prejudice (Austen), 167

  prisoners and their children, 61–62

  Project Gutenberg, 173

  Proust and the Squid (Wolf), 96

  Pullman, Philip, 95, 126

  Putnam, Robert, 15

  Queen’s University Belfast study of brain activation in premature infants, 49–50, 232n50

  Ramayana (Sanskrit poem), 23, 25

  Rand Corporation, 58

  Rapunzel (Zelinsky), 162

  Rashid family reading experiment, 195–97, 212–15

  Rayner, Catherine, 84–85

  Read Aloud 15 MINUTES, 16–17

  read-aloud time

  overview, 191, 197– 212

  audiobooks versus live readers, 37–38, 131

  in Baltimore school library, 118–21, 123

  bathtime as, 213–14

  at bedtime, 15, 87–89

  benefits from, xv, 19–20, 46–48, 122

  children reading text while you read aloud, 208

  children reading to their parents, 178–79

  and children’s age differences, 205

  commitment to, 108–9

  as a continuum of literacy skills, 130

  in Cuban cigar factories, 33–34

  cumulative benefits, 86–87

  for dogs, 188–91

  as entertainment, 29–31, 228n31

  executive function skill development, 80–82, 187

  fairy tales, 146–48

  as indicator of child’s prospects in life, xiv, 15, 52, 96–100, 122–23

  inner richness of, 217–18

  interactive reading, 1–3, 106

  liberation offered by, 138–44

  making time for, 108–9, 202–3, 204–5, 205–6

  nursing home program, 182–86

  as purpose for writing, 24–26

  responsive adaptations, 171–72

  as sacrifice and nuisance, xviii, 108–9, 202–3, 204–6

  among American settlers, 31–33

  starting with older children, 200

  with technology for military parents, 57–61

  and vocabulary development, 92–95, 97–100, 102–4

  widening perspective with, 148–51, 173–76, 244n147

  in Wilder’s The Long Winter, 32–33

  Reade, Charles, 31–32

  The Reader, 185, 188

  reading aloud skills

  overview, 180, 181–82

  and auditory discrimination, 107–8

  mothers and fathers compared, 205–7

  reading groups for the elderly, 182–88

  Reading Magic (Fox), 153

  receptive vocabulary, 109–10, 125, 240n110

  Reidy, Carolyn, 121–22

  repressive governments limiting access to books and information, 142–44

  research

  Georgetown University, on effects of reading aloud to babies, 50–53

  Head Start study of children’s emotional regulation ability, 80–81

  Indiana University, Bloomington, on children’s vocabulary based on conversations versus read-aloud time, 98–99

  “Learning on Hold,” on effect of cell phone interruptions on child-parent time, 198

  New York University, on parents’ use of wordless picture books, 157–58

  Northwestern University, on videos claiming to teach infants, 75

  Oregon State University, on attention-span persistence, 122–23

  Pennsylvania State University, on technoference, 44

  Queen’s University Belfast, on brain activation in premature infants, 49–50, 232n50

  Stanford University, on low-
income families’ child-directed words, 99

  University of California, on domestic alienation, 45

  University of Delaware, on effect of cell phone interruptions on child-parent time, 198

  University of Kansas, on language skill development of children in word-rich versus word-poor homes, 96–97, 99

  University of Liverpool, on reading to Alzheimers patients, 187–88

  University of Montreal, on babies’ recognition of their mother’s voices, 49

  University of Sussex, on children learning vocabulary from books, 102–4

  University of Virginia, on DVD claiming to teach vocabulary to infants, 74–75

  Yale University, on life expectancy and reading, 187

  responsive adaptations, 171–72

  rhapsodes (Greek storytellers), 21–23, 24, 29

  Richter, Conrad, 66

  Riddell, Chris, 118

  The Rights of the Reader (Pennac), 124

  Rip Van Winkle (Irving), 54

  Robinson, Jackie, 1

  Romania’s Abandoned Children (Nelson, Fox, and Zeanah), 73

  Romania’s orphanages, 73

  Rommely, Danica, 63, 64

  Rommely, Eric, 63, 64

  Rommely, Gabe, 63–65

  Rosen, Christine, 163–64

  routines and structure, 87–89, 100–101, 102

  Rowland, Caroline, 106

  Rubery, Matthew, 35, 36, 38, 131, 229n36

  Rumpelstiltskin (Zelinsky), 162

  Rushdie, Salman, 23

  Russian 3-year-old child adoption story, 87–89

  Sail (Patterson), 134

  de Saint-Exupéry, Antoine, 155, 217–18

  Sam and Dave Dig a Hole (Barnett), 107

  The Sand Castle Contest (Munsch), 11

  Scarry, Patsy, 159

  Scarry, Richard, 101, 159

  Scheffler, Axel, 100

  Schlitz, Laura Amy, 118–21

  Scholastic family reading habits surveys, 18

  Scholastic’s 2016 survey of family reading habits, 211

  schools

  methods for teaching about literature, 131–35

  read-aloud time at a Baltimore school library, 118–21, 123

  school readiness, 16–18, 225n16

  art and science as escape from everyday life, 179–80

  self-determination theory, 211

  semantic network, 12

  Sendak, Maurice, 162, 165

  sense of horizons, 148–51, 244n147

  Seo, Suna, 50–51

  separation anxiety alleviated with videos, 57–61

  Serial (podcast, Koenig), 132–33

  settlers’ read-aloud time in American West, 31–33

  Shaara, Michael, 192–93

  The Shadow (Diamond), 85–86

  shamans (Native American storytellers), 24

  Sheldon, Michael, 178

  Show and Tell (Evans), 85

  Sims, Michael, 46

  singing the text, 201–2

  Sleepy Solar System (Hutton), 6

  smartphones and tablets

  adults’ addiction to, 42–43

  day care center anti-phone sign, 43–44

 

‹ Prev