34 Responses to "Raise a Reader Infogram"

I would also love to post this on my school library website, with your permission.


I would love to post this on my school website. May I do so with a link to your site? Also, is there a way to get a “poster” version of this?


I want this on bookmarks to hand out to parents! LOVE it!


Is there any effective baby carriers for twin babies?
I can picture a man travelling with a child strapped to the front side,
and another to the backside. Cant see it being a
very comfy formation.


[…] Source: Nancy Ann’s Blog […]


[…] See on nancyann.wordpress.com […]


[…] See on nancyann.wordpress.com […]


[…] See on nancyann.wordpress.com […]


[…] Source […]


It’s a very nice message, but the times don’t add up… With your numbers, your child’s day has 26 hours (7800/365=21.3 900/180=5). Also, children spend a minimum 6.5 hours a day at school, and at least 10 of the “at home” hours are spent sleeping, wich leaves (if they are lucky) 7.5 hours with their parents.


[…] Read, read, read aloud to kids! I saw a great chart that shows what happens when children experience a great read-aloud. (I found it at Nancy Ann’s Blog) […]


Why is it the majority of SEO professionals come in India?
These are the ones I come across though
Posted this on my wall, very good


[…] Improves Kids’ Long Term Reading Success Finally, you probably know that decades of research shows that reading aloud to a child daily is one of the most important activities for her reading success. That goes for older kids, too. Kids who are read to have good vocabularies, write well, and do well overall in school (Hiebert, Scott, & Wilkinson, 1985 U. S. Department of Education meta-study of 10,000 studies). They’re also more likely to keep reading on their own. […]


[…] kids a bedtime story (even your older children) you’re building important literacy skills. Many parents stop reading to their kids around 4th grade, but if you keep reading to your kids, research shows you’ll help keep them reading on their […]


Could I please have permission to turn this into a pull up banner with credit to you and Usborne books please? Happy to send you more information on what I am doing with it if you need it. thanks
Daron Pratt

Yes Daron, that would be just fine. I’d love a link to see it when you have it up. Thanks!

thanks so much. Will send you a copy of the banner design when it is completed.




[…] Source: Nancy Ann’s blog […]


[…] kids a bedtime story (even your older children) you’re building important literacy skills. Many parents stop reading to their kids around 4th grade, but if you keep reading to your kids, research shows you’ll help keep them reading on their own. […]


I love your infographic and am also an Usborne Consultant…would you mind if I modify the contact information at the bottom and use this myself? Thanks in advance!

Kori, this is an image that our home office provided for us. 🙂 It’s fine to use, as it’s available to all of us.



[…] Seeing your child piece letters and words together as he reads from a book. But as much as he enjoys reading now, how do you make sure he continues to do so in the years ahead? After all, you read bleak stats about kids’ interest in reading on their own dwindle as early as fourth grade. […]


[…] Infogram […]


[…] Source […]


Hi, I absolutely love this infogram! May I please use it in a program encouraging parents to read to their children?


[…] Seeing kids piece letters and words together as they read from a book. But as much as they enjoy reading now, how do we make sure they continue to do so in the years ahead? After all, you see bleak stats about kids’ interest in reading on their own dwindle as early as fourth grade. […]


[…] Research on children’s interest in reading has found that in kindergarten nearly 100 percent of children are interested in reading outside of school. By fourth grade, this drops to 54 percent, and by eighth grade just 30 percent of students express an interest in reading outside of school. […]

February 5, 2013 at 3:43 pm
I loved your “reader infogram!” Could I share it on my blog and include a link to yours?