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Description

It’s Dr. Seuss Day and Read Across America Week, and Christine is celebrating the magic of reading aloud—because in her home, books are a daily rhythm, not just a school subject. In this episode, she shares why reading to your kids is one of the most powerful (and simple) ways to support literacy, confidence, comprehension, and connection. You’ll hear practical ways to weave reading into real life—like the car, waiting rooms, the porch, and the couch—plus encouragement for both early learners and struggling readers. Christine also reminds parents that every child learns on their own timeline, and when reading feels hard, it’s worth looking deeper than what’s on the surface.

Join the Conversation:

Head over to the Home Education with Ease Facebook Group and answer this week’s questions:

  1. What is your favorite Dr. Seuss book?
  2. What is your child’s favorite Dr. Seuss book right now?
  3. How often are you currently reading aloud—and what are you reading together?

Share your answers with the community, ask questions, or DM Christine!

Takeaways:

  1. Reading is happening all day long—signs, recipes, emails, devotionals—so building a reading-rich home can feel natural and simple.
  2. Every child learns to read on a different timeline; readiness matters more than pressure or comparison.
  3. If a child is struggling, it may not be “just reading”—there may be a deeper root cause connected to learning, focus, or health.
  4. Reading aloud builds vocabulary, comprehension, grammar awareness, and confidence—especially when books are above a child’s independent level.
  5. “Picture reading” counts: kids can retell stories using images, memorization, and story language long before decoding words.
  6. Strong readers are built through multi-sensory exposure: hearing words, seeing print, saying sounds, and connecting meaning.
  7. Sometimes students need to go backward to move forward—especially kids impacted by pandemic-era schooling gaps.

Quotes:

  1. “Let me tell you, some Dr. Seuss books were key to my children starting to learn how to read and feeling confident and independent while reading.”
  2. “We read everywhere because it's so important just to have that reading component as part of our day.”
  3. “Every child is going to read at a different time.”
  4. “If your child is struggling, don't keep pushing them before they're ready—figure out what is that root cause.”
  5. “Don't underestimate the fact of them flipping through a book and looking at the pictures.”
  6. “Think about how many things that you can teach just from reading. So many.”
  7. “Don’t underestimate how powerful reading is with your kids… these skills… truly going to set them up for success.”

Resources & Links:

🌟 Connect with like-minded families, build community and access resources in the Home Education with Ease Facebook Group

Connect with Christine:

If this episode resonated with you and you’re wondering what next steps might look like for your family, I’d love to connect. Feel free to reach out and send me a message.

Email: christine@eduplaylearning.com

Facebook: Home Education with Ease Facebook Group

Instagram:@thehomeeducationexpert |@eduplaylearning

YouTube: EduPlay Learning YouTube

If you’d like to connect more personally, you’re welcome to complete the EduPlay Learning Questionnaire and share about your family’s learning journey. You don’t have to do this alone. I’m here to support and encourage you every step of the way.

🎧 Loved this episode? Subscribe, leave a review, and share it with a fellow mom that could use some inspiration and encouragement!