Thursday 7 November 2013

Advantages Of Reading Childrens Poems

By Allyson Burke


Poetry may not seem very important to an adult today, but it is a type of writing that has many benefits when read to children. Reading childrens poems is a great way to develop very important life skills, such as telling one pitch apart from another, recognizing rhymes, and learning rhythm. It is an excellent way to get a child to gain an interest in writing, reading, or singing.

Nursery rhymes are probably the earliest form of children's poetry. They have been around since the 1700's. The earliest nursery rhymes were lullabies, which were originally intended to help children fall sleep, hence the name.

Over the years, nursery rhymes developed more distinct melodic lines as well as references to historical events. "Baa, Baa, Black Sheep" was a reference to the slave trade and the wool tax in Britain in 1744. "London Bridge is Falling Down" was a reference to the Vikings' conquest. And "Ring Around the Rosie" was a dreadful euphemism for the Bubonic Plague of 1790. Little nursery rhymes such as these were easy to memorize and sing because they were short, rhymed, and had simple melodies.

Repetition and speech is what children learn from the fastest. Singing, speaking, writing, and reading continuously help children develop language skills. Children with a lot of exposure to reading and speaking tend to have superior language comprehension capabilities and accelerated cognitive development by age 3. Poetry and nursery rhymes can teach all of these skills to a child.

Take for example, the well-known nursery rhyme "Ring Around the Rosie". All of its syllables are in rhythm with the song's beat, and it has a rhyme in every one of its lines. Little poetry pieces such as these could easily teach a child reading, singing, and attentive listening while keeping the energy level up. Children who are talented at music, reading, and spatial reasoning were most likely raised listening to nursery rhymes and reading poetry.

The fact that children enjoy this poetry is what makes this system work so well. Children's short attention spans are taken into account, resulting in shorter works. Added humorous pictures also provide much needed visual stimulation. A child would most likely be very bored if asked to sit through the reading of an entire novel, without any form of music, singing, or visual interpretations. Poetry does a great job at keeping children entertained while providing a means to improving cognitive development. The poetry of Dr. Seuss and Shel Silverstein are excellent works that can do such a thing for children. A child would easily find a short poem with pictures and rhymes to be much more entertaining than a novel full of dry prose.

Poems can therefore be seen as a gateway to a great education. A child who loves poems and nursery rhymes would be highly likely to begin reading novels and longer works. Such hobbies could potentially lead to excellent writing, exceptional vocabulary, and good conversational skills.

But aside from academics, reading poetry has personal benefits as well. It keeps children entertained and it promotes the use of their imagination. Studies show that imagination and creativity keep children away from academic and social delinquency. Also, a creative mind would help in adolescence and adulthood by exploring unconventional solutions to life's problems.

Reading childrens poems is such an innocent and unassuming act that one might be surprised by how much good it does for the child. But there are reasons why poetry and nursery rhymes from the 1700's are still around today. Reading simple poetry every night may almost be the best thing one can do for a child's future.




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