ADDITIONAL READING
Your Final Insight: Making Learning Interactive
Storytelling is most effective when children become active participants, not just silent listeners. As the report highlights, research by educational psychologist John Hattie shows that children who move, talk, and answer during lessons retain information far more effectively. This is why our method goes beyond just reading—it’s about inviting your child into the story.
Chapter 3 of our guide gives you simple, powerful strategies to make learning truly interactive and personal. You’ll learn how to turn letters into actions (“Can you twist like a Z?”), send your child on a real-world “hunt” for objects from the story, or draw the characters together to bring them to life. When they help create the experience, they take ownership of the learning.
This is how ABCs stop being something to memorize and become a game they love to create and play.
