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Reading Books in Today's World

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Qedem Nesher
Reading Books in Today's World

In the first decade of the new millennium, fast analysis of global developments in child publishing reinforced the popularity that fantasy storybooks in English have in the child book scene. Of Harry Potter's 450 million bookings sold during this time, and of Stephenie Meyer's Twilight series’ more recent "young adult" phenomenon, it seems like children are as keen as ever to creativity and not "forwards" out of fiction, the dominance of dystopian fantasy in the young adult with Suzanne Collins's Hunger Games in charge. Of necessity, reading capacity is vital to the academic development of adolescents, and without it, their textbooks will not be learned.

Schools require children to read the best books for elementary students, but with plain terms, by around the age of seven. To support this method, schoolbook developers balance vocabulary and grammar with the age of the kids. Yet many children see books as a challenge, as most of them only read books, particularly when it is compulsory to read books, and schoolbooks are seldom exciting. Parents support children in preschool by reading them and later on, simple elementary school novels. This is a useful form of social bonding and creating an attraction for the child in books. Sadly, the parent/child reading relationship normally stops when the child begins school when it is needed most. The dedication needed to motivate the child to read non-school after school was launched is very difficult for the parent, but the rich benefits the enjoyment of reading brings are well worth considering.

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Qedem Nesher
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