TeenTober: Cultivating a Fondness for Reading

a bookshelf with an assortment of books such as Heidi, The Green Ember, Macbeth, The Giver, Brown Girl Dreaming, and 100 Cupboards.

Editor’s note:TeenTober™ is a new, nationwide celebration hosted by libraries every October and aims to celebrate teens, promote year-round teen services and the innovative ways teen services helps teens learn new skills, and fuel their passions in and outside the library. Today we look at inspiring your teen who is blind or low vision to read!

TeenTober: Cultivating a Fondness for Reading

Reading is a treasure (and one of my greatest loves!). It is truly much more than entertainment or a diversion—reading feeds the mind. Through imaginative, fictitious tales, ancient myths, autobiographies, historical accounts, poetry, fairytales, legends, and self-helps, one encounters ideas—in time and through wide reading, one begins making connections between ideas. Yes, through reading one can develop relationships with knowledge, gleaning and forming thoughts from current authors and those who lived long ago, from others’ experiences, from story patterns and protagonists, and from images and metaphors.

Say one reads a fairytale involving a witch offering a poisonous, yet attractive, apple. Years later, one reads of the Trojan horse, constructed by the Greeks to appear a peace offering, but it was not so. One then listens along to The Winter King, a riveting piece of fiction involving an impoverished teenager, Cora, who daily toils in the councilman’s kitchen—Cora is covertly given gifts of food from the councilman’s son. One begins to make connections. Ah, not all gifts are well-intentioned.

A formal lesson or a textbook isn’t necessary here, nor a parental lecture. The individual has made connections through stories.

And so, I enthusiastically support TeenTober with the intent of encouraging teens who are blind or low vision to read…to participate in a lifelong education—to wrestle with ideas and make connections.

But maybe your teen doesn’t enjoy picking up a book. Consider with me how you can promote reading with your teen.

Choose the Right Medium

For your child to read for pleasure, reading must be accessible. If your child is primarily a print reader, but print is downright frustrating or straining to the eyes, it may be time to learn braille (even if only for jotting notes or labeling items) and to make use of audio books. As the research outlined in the article, Does Modality Matter? The Effects of Reading, Listening, and Dual Modality on Comprehension, affirms, reading through listening is as effective as traditional reading. For those who are blind or low vision, reading through audio or braille is often much more efficient and effective than traditional sight reading.

The following resources provide accessible books through braille, audio, or electronic print:

No matter the medium of choice, your child will be reaping the benefits of books.

Discover the Right Books and Reading Material

You really don’t know what reading material will inspire your child, cultivate their imagination, or provide ideas with which they will form relations. Spread a wide feast.

You may not think to read historical fiction, but it may fascinate your teen. How about ancient myths, how-tos, biographies, detective novels, fantasies, science fiction, plays, comedies, or epic poems?

Consider, too, magazines, informational texts, reviews, comics, and personal narratives.

As a helpful starting place, Read-Aloud Revival provides a booklist for teen girls and a booklist for teen boys. I have found books on both lists my girls cannot put down—well, cannot turn off, because audiobooks are their preference.

Think current interests, yes, but then think wider. You never know what will become an interest due to an impactful book. Ensure a variety of accessible books is available.

Inspire Your Teen

I started the blog with my reason for esteeming books—minds feast on ideas. Though it’s true, I don’t think “reading for the sake of feeding your mind” is going to win many teens to “Team Reading”. Perhaps we should let our youth be inspired by teens who read.

Whether you “just so happen” to watch the video with your teen nearby or you invite them to take a listen, check out these inspiring teens passionate about books:

Sisters Share Love of Books on TikTok

Additionally, invite your teen to host or join a teen book club.

Read Aloud

Whether it’s a book club book or an adventure book for your family, read it aloud.

Your teen isn’t too old to enjoy a family reading session. You can take turns choosing an evening read aloud, play an audiobook on a car ride, or read aloud when each family member is engaged in a quiet activity. Reading aloud has many benefits, one of which is fostering a love of reading.

Pick Up a Book

My last suggestion is to foster your own love of reading. Model it.

Sit down with a book or play an audiobook when working on a project or housework. Talk about what you enjoy from the story—just enough talk to inspire, not lecture.

Get excited when you find a book sale. Devote a part of your home to books you may want to re-read.

Pick up the book.

Parents cannot control whether a teen enjoys reading, but a parent is certainly influential. You can help your child access books, you can help them find books they want to devour, you can introduce your child to other teens who read, you can read aloud to the family, and you can model a love of reading.

This TeenTober, let’s set the scene for our teens to cultivate a fondness for stories, opening the door to lifelong enjoyment and learning.

Learn more: