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E-X-E-R-C-I-S-E
Health and Fitness by the Book
By Lisa A. Goldstein
Two things are important early on in your child's life: being read to and learning about health and fitness. Why not combine the two?
Reading aloud to children helps stimulate brain development, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics, yet only 50 percent of infants and toddlers are routinely read to by their parents.
Indeed, reading does more than nurture pre-reading skills. "It promotes and models good habits," says Claudia Weger, assistant executive director of the Ossining Children's Center in Ossining, N.Y. And these habits will be the foundation for your child's lifelong good health.
Books are good teachers, read by good teachers – you. Abby Scheer of Syracuse, N.Y., has been reading to her toddler twin girls since they were born. "They naturally look to books as sources for learning and discovering things about the world," says Scheer.


