Giving A Child A Good Book For Christmas Can Pay Dividends
By John Ostapkovich
PHILADELPHIA (CBS) - Toys and electronics are certainly hot Christmas gifts for kids, but it may be that nothing packs a longer-term punch than a good book.
Books are not only windows to a new world, but a powerful mental exercise that is especially effective with the pre-Kindergarten crowd.
Justin Chanda -- Board Member of the Children's Book Council, and a children's book publisher with CBS-owned Simon and Schuster -- has a long list of books to recommend, but knows that with that, he's probably preaching to the choir, rather than those for whom books go unappreciated:
"We need to work with various organizations like First Book, for example, that are helping donate books into underserved communities," he says. "On my level, I think the important thing is to continue to publish books that have both multicultural facets but are also dealing with topics that are not just of privilege."
Chanda says e-books are great, but nothing beats the experience of an adult and child reading a physical book together.
"There's nothing that compares with having a four-year-old sit on your lap, and you open a book in front of them and you turn the pages together. I think there's such an interactive, connective experience there that the e-book will never replace."