How to Read Children’s Stories So They Truly Come Alive
Helping
Children Listen, Imagine, Learn, and Grow Through the Power of Storytelling
By
Bill Conley
Introduction
Reading to children is one of the
most important and meaningful things a parent, grandparent, teacher, or
caregiver can do. A story is never just words on a page. A great children’s
story becomes an experience. It becomes a memory. It becomes a lesson, a feeling,
a moment of connection, and sometimes even a turning point in the life of a
child.
Many adults make the mistake of
simply reading words quickly from beginning to end, almost as if they are
trying to complete a task. But children’s stories are not meant to be rushed
through. They are meant to be experienced slowly, emotionally, visually, and
interactively. The real magic of reading happens when the child becomes
emotionally connected to the story itself.
Every child learns differently. Some
children are auditory learners, meaning they absorb information primarily
through hearing. These children listen closely to tone, rhythm, inflection,
pauses, and emotion. Other children are visual learners. They learn by seeing
pictures, observing expressions, watching movement, and exploring details on
the page. Many children are a combination of both.
Understanding how your child learns
is one of the keys to becoming a wonderful storyteller. When you learn how your
child absorbs information best, you can read in a way that captures their
imagination and helps them fully understand the message behind the story.
Children also learn through emotion.
If the reader shows excitement, sadness, suspense, joy, or wonder, the child
begins to feel those emotions too. This emotional engagement is what helps
children stay focused, remember lessons, and connect deeply to the story.
When I read stories to children, I
do not simply “read.” I perform the story. I slow down. I use emotion. I change
voices. I pause dramatically. I ask questions. I look into the eyes of the
children to see if they are engaged and understanding what is happening. If
they seem distracted, I stop and bring them back into the story through
conversation and imagination.
A children’s story should feel
alive.
Picture books are especially
powerful because they allow children to combine what they hear with what they
see. Sometimes the most important learning moments happen when you stop reading
for a moment and simply explore the illustrations together. Ask questions about
what the child notices. Encourage them to imagine what happens next. Let them
linger on the page instead of rushing forward.
Reading stories properly helps
children improve listening skills, comprehension, emotional intelligence,
imagination, vocabulary, attention span, and even reading ability itself.
Pointing to words as you read can also help children begin connecting spoken
language with written language. Over time, this builds confidence and early
literacy skills.
Most importantly, reading together
creates connection. Children remember the feeling of sitting close to someone
who cared enough to spend time reading with them. Those moments often become
treasured memories that last a lifetime.
The following tips and storytelling
techniques can help transform story time into something truly magical for both
you and the child.
Understand How Children Learn
One of the most important things to
recognize is that children do not all learn the same way. Some children are
auditory learners who absorb information best through listening carefully to
words, sounds, rhythm, and tone. These children often pay close attention to
how something is said, not just what is being said.
Other children are visual learners
who focus heavily on illustrations, expressions, colors, movement, and details
on the page. These children may spend long periods studying a single
illustration while imagining their own version of the story inside their minds.
When reading to children, observe
how they respond. Are they focused on your voice? Are they staring at the
pictures? Are they asking questions about what they see? Learning how your
child learns allows you to tailor the reading experience specifically for them.
The better you understand your child’s
learning style, the more effective and meaningful story time becomes.
Read Slowly and With Emotion
One of the biggest mistakes adults
make is reading too quickly. Children need time to absorb the words, emotions,
and meaning behind the story. Slow reading helps children process information
more deeply and stay connected to the narrative.
Inflection and emotion are
incredibly important. Your voice should rise, fall, soften, and intensify
depending on the scene. If a character is excited, sound excited. If a
character is scared, lower your voice and create suspense. If something funny
happens, laugh with the child.
Emotion helps bring stories to life.
Children are naturally drawn to
expressive storytelling because it stimulates both their imagination and
emotions. They become more invested in what is happening and more likely to
remember the lesson afterward.
A story should never sound robotic
or rushed. It should sound alive.
Use Different Voices for Characters
Children love it when characters sound
different from one another. Giving characters unique voices helps children
follow the story more easily while making the experience more entertaining and
engaging.
You do not need to be a professional
actor. Even small voice changes can make a tremendous difference. Perhaps one
character speaks softly while another sounds energetic and bold. Maybe a tiny
mouse has a squeaky voice while a large bear has a deep and slow voice.
Character voices help children
distinguish personalities and understand emotions more clearly. They also make
children excited to hear what happens next because the story feels more
interactive and real.
Most importantly, using voices
demonstrates enthusiasm. Children can feel when an adult genuinely enjoys
reading the story, and that excitement becomes contagious.
Pause and Ask Questions
One of the best ways to improve
comprehension is to stop periodically and ask questions throughout the story.
Questions keep children mentally
engaged instead of passively listening. Ask simple questions such as:
“What do you think will happen
next?”
“How do you think the character
feels?”
“Why do you think the bunny did
that?”
“What would you do in that
situation?”
Questions encourage children to
think critically while strengthening emotional understanding and imagination.
Pausing also gives children time to
process the story. Some children need extra moments to fully absorb
information. Slowing down and engaging them through conversation creates a much
richer learning experience.
If you notice a child becoming
distracted, asking a question is often the perfect way to bring their attention
back into the story.
Make Eye Contact and Watch for Engagement
Reading to children should never
feel disconnected. Pay attention to their faces, expressions, and body language
as you read.
Are they smiling? Are they focused?
Are they confused? Are they restless?
Children communicate engagement
through their eyes and reactions. Looking into their eyes while reading helps
create an emotional connection and allows you to adjust your storytelling in real
time.
If a child seems distracted, pause
briefly and reconnect them to the story through a question, expression, or
playful interaction.
Children want to feel included in
the storytelling process. The more connected they feel, the more powerful the
experience becomes.
Let Children Explore the Illustrations
Picture books offer far more than
words alone. The illustrations themselves are often filled with important
details, emotions, hidden lessons, and opportunities for imagination.
Do not rush to turn the page.
Allow children time to study the
artwork. Ask them what they notice. Encourage them to describe colors,
expressions, objects, animals, or scenery.
Sometimes children discover things
adults completely overlook.
Exploring illustrations helps
develop observation skills, imagination, creativity, and vocabulary. It also
allows visual learners to connect more deeply with the story.
The pictures are part of the
storytelling experience. Let children fully enjoy them.
Encourage Imagination
Stories are powerful because they
allow children to imagine worlds beyond what they see every day.
Encourage children to picture the
scenes in their minds. Ask them to imagine sounds, smells, feelings, or what
might happen after the story ends.
Imagination is one of the greatest
gifts a child possesses. It fuels creativity, problem-solving, innovation,
emotional intelligence, and curiosity.
When adults engage a child’s
imagination during story time, they are helping strengthen skills that will
benefit the child for the rest of their life.
Stories should open doors inside the
mind.
Point to the Words While Reading
For young children who are beginning
to recognize language, pointing to words while reading can be extremely
helpful.
This allows children to connect
spoken words with written words visually. Over time, children begin recognizing
patterns, letters, and vocabulary naturally through repetition.
Finger pointing also helps children
understand reading direction and pacing.
For some children, this small
technique becomes an important early step toward learning how to read
independently.
The goal is not pressure or
perfection. The goal is exposure, familiarity, and confidence.
Conclusion
Reading to children is far more
important than many people realize. It is not simply entertainment. It is
education, bonding, emotional development, imagination building, and memory
making, all happening at the same time.
The way a story is read can
dramatically change how much a child learns and remembers from it. A rushed
story read with little emotion may quickly be forgotten. But a story read
slowly, lovingly, emotionally, and interactively can stay with a child forever.
Children thrive when storytelling
becomes an experience rather than a task. They learn through sound, sight,
imagination, emotion, repetition, and engagement. Some children learn primarily
through listening. Others absorb more through visuals and illustrations. The
best storytelling approach often combines both.
Reading with inflection, emotion,
pauses, and different character voices transforms words on a page into living
moments inside a child’s imagination. Asking questions helps children think
deeply and stay engaged. Making eye contact allows you to understand whether
the child is emotionally connected to the story. Lingering on illustrations
gives children time to explore details and expand their creativity.
Story time should never feel rushed.
Children benefit greatly when adults
slow down and truly invite them into the experience. Sometimes the most
meaningful moments occur during the pauses between pages when imagination
begins to take over.
Pointing to words while reading can also
help children begin connecting language to text, strengthening early reading
skills naturally and gently. Over time, these small moments help build
confidence, comprehension, and a lifelong love of books.
Most importantly, reading together
creates emotional closeness. Long after children forget certain details of a
story, they often remember how story time made them feel. They remember
laughter, excitement, comfort, safety, curiosity, and love.
Books have the power to shape hearts
and minds.
A great children’s story is not
simply read. It is shared. It is felt. It is experienced together.
When adults bring stories to life
with emotion, patience, imagination, and engagement, children gain far more
than entertainment. They gain understanding, confidence, creativity, emotional
connection, and a deeper love for learning itself.
That is the true magic of reading to
children.



