I am now having problems with this since DD is soooo active. I can't even get her to sit still because she wants to explore everything. This is even after bath time and she's relaxed. My fiance was taking her to the library every Tuesday to a puppet show where they read stories and act them out and she loves those. I have now picked up doing that since fiance's shift has changed. When I read books from home and check out books from the library, she doesn't sit still enough to even listen. Of course she likes to chew all of her board books. All I do is play music, sing to her, and she looks at Blues Clues and that's it and she loves that from both of us. Any suggestions because I'm about to give up reading to her until she's 18-24 months.
Re: Reading to your baby
Like PP most of our reading is done at nap and bedtime. DD sits on my lap and we read a board book at naps (she turns the pages) bc it is short. At bedtimes she sits on my lap and DH reads 1-2 longer books. Sometimes she fidgets and grabs the books etc.
We stick to relatively short stories bc her attention span is pretty short. We have a couple board books that are small and she can chew them etc. But unless she picks up them up and shows interest we leave stories till bedtime (it also helps her wind down so I'm OK with not doing a lot of reading during the day)
we do reading as part of our bedtime routine, it's the last thing we do before a quick lullably and then in the crib. By this time he's ready to just hang out in my lap and interact on a quiter sleepier level. My favorite time of day lol
For now, if your LO wont sit still, just read to them while they play. At this age it's really just about hearing language and grammar and learning how people talk. They really just need to hear us say different words in certain orders.
DS eats everything including books but we got these "Indestructibles" books from Amazon and they are freaking awesome. They have no words but I like that better because I get to make up stories and show DS all the different things in the book rather than just sticking to a storyline. I recall reading a study done that said books with no words were better at this age anyway but I can't find it at the moment. They are seriously indestructible (I have tried to rip them without success) they are washable and fairly cheap.