Reading to Your Baby: Why It Matters from Day One

You don’t need to wait until your baby understands words. Reading from birth wires the brain for language, builds vocabulary, and creates connection — and the cuddles aren’t bad either.

The Science

Children read to daily are exposed to roughly 1.4 million more words by age 5 than those who aren’t. The “30-million-word gap” study and follow-ups link early reading to school readiness, vocabulary, and emotional development.

Books by Age

  • 0–6 months: High-contrast black/white, faces, simple board books.
  • 6–12 months: Touch-and-feel, lift-the-flap, rhyme.
  • 12–24 months: Simple stories, animal sounds, repetition.
  • 2–3 years: Slightly longer narratives, predictable plots, characters they relate to.

How to Read

Use exaggerated voices, point at pictures, ask questions, and let them turn pages — even out of order. Stop when they’ve had enough; 5 minutes counts. Re-read favorites; repetition is how toddlers learn.

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