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Reading to children can give them a step up as their young brains develop; but is all reading equally beneficial?

These days parents, caregivers and teachers have lots of options when it comes to fulfilling that request. You can read a picture book, put on a cartoon, play an audiobook, or even ask Alexa. A newly published study gives some insight into what may be happening inside young children's brains in each of those situations. And, says lead author Dr. John Hutton, there is an apparent "Goldilocks effect" — some kinds of storytelling may be "too cold" for children, while others are "too hot." And, of course, some are "just right." #children #reading #Childdevelopment

[kqed.org]

josephr 7 May 27
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I vote for the benefit coming from actually having the parents talking to the kids. Very few parents demonstrate an actual interest in spending time with their kids. They give them their cell phones or tablets to avoid actual one-on-one interactions.

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