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photo by Marcus Frazier
In an effort to give a head start in reading, local hospitals and the Armstrong Library is sending reading packets home with new born babies. Karry Hosford reads to her 4-week-old daughter Abagail. Below, the contents of the packet includes a baby book, a library card for the baby and an application for a adult card.
Library has baby-welcoming gifts ready
Published Friday, May 2, 2008
NATCHEZ — With 500 children’s books, two brightly colored rugs and a plush new rocking chair, the staff of Armstrong Library is hoping to change the future of literacy in Adams County.
With funding from a Rotary International grant, the library has purchased 500 books for mothers to read to their newborns.
The books, to be distributed in kits, will be given to mothers leaving Natchez Regional Medical Center and Natchez Community Hospital.
Anne White, Armstrong’s assistant director, said the reading program for newborns is the first step in a community-wide literacy program.
“It’s so critical to success later in life,” she said of early literacy development. “And the library is an integral part of the community.”
White said the plan to get mothers reading to their newborns will hopefully encourage those same children to pursue a life filled with reading.
Upon leaving the hospital mothers will receive an age appropriate book, a special library card application and a library card for their newborn.
The parent’s application form will be used to measure the program’s utilization, White said.
Local hospital officials agreed with White and said it’s never too early to start reading to children.
Nurse manager of the Women’s Center at Natchez Regional Medical Center, Glenda Pollan, said many parents begin reading to their children even before they’re born.
“When they’re born they can recognize voices,” she said.
And even though newborn children cannot comprehend material being read to them, they still benefit from reading, Pollan said.
“It helps to create a bond and helps the baby to focus,” she said.
Pollan said the focus a child builds while being read to is not equal to the focus from watching television or playing a video game.
“And there’s no bonding with television,” she said.
White said in preparation of what she hopes will be a renewed interest in the library; the children’s reading area has been expanded.
In the coming month she hopes to expand the children’s reading time to include a time for mothers to read to newborns.
White said once all the reading kits are assembled she hopes to have them in hospitals by mid-May.




Comments
Posted by free_radical (anonymous) on May 2, 2008 at 12:23 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I want that baby! ;)
Posted by pittypat55 (anonymous) on May 2, 2008 at 7:39 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Thank you Rotarians. What a wonderful gift!
Posted by jabese5 (anonymous) on May 2, 2008 at 8:29 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I think this is a wonderful thing to do. I believe it is NEVER too early to start children with books. Teach them to love books and teach them how to treat books. I wish they would have been doing it when I had my youngest here!
Posted by ntzmom (anonymous) on May 2, 2008 at 12:01 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I think everyone should a "favorite baby book" Themed baby shower...start the nursery off with lots of books to read to baby!
Posted by freedom42 (anonymous) on May 2, 2008 at 7:36 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I saved all my kids books - Dr. Seuss, the Bearinstain Bears, and I don't remember what all. I have 3 boxes of books ready for my expected grandbabies. Reading can be so enjoyable, but children today are not taught reading for fun.
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