Most people who enjoy reading also try writing - it's a natural connection. If something is fun, you want to try it. Children who read for pleasure think about what they have read and want more of the same, so they invent stories about their favorite characters and settings.
It probably depends on the child but poetry comes from all over the world not just in Rome. More specifically, a child who has read about Rome and then travelled to Rome would be most likely to write stories in Rome.
You can't -- and you shouldn't! If your children want to write stories, they will. If they don't want to be writers, you should not try to force them. You can encourage them to write down their thoughts, and to learn good language skills, but you should not try to make children become anything they don't want to become.
because she wanted to make children read interesting stories.......
because he used to make up stories for his children before bed
Dr. Seuss chose to write children's books because he wanted to engage young readers with entertaining stories that also conveyed important moral lessons. He believed that using rhymes and whimsical illustrations would make learning enjoyable for children.
Probably make them girly
Because people LOVE animals and stories and tales about animals make great children's stories. But so do stories about humans...
Looking to write one? A fellow amateur playwright? Here's one I gave up on years ago, here's hoping you can make do: Treasure Island. Good luck!
A question, though related to children, yet it is worth more than its price! Children literature can range on vivid scale. You cannot try to limit it, nor you can try to protract it to some length. Aesop's Tale, I would like to say, are the best example of children literature in ideal sense. Children literature may, strictly saying, delight and make the children learn at the same time.
Because she wants to make money and enjoys literature.
Alison M. Abel has written: 'Now you are six' -- subject(s): Children's literature, Collections, Literature 'Make Hay While the Sun Shines' 'Now you are seven' -- subject(s): Children's literature, Collections, Literature
Hearing stories is vital for a child's development, fostering language skills, cognitive abilities, emotional understanding, and social awareness. Stories also cultivate creativity, nurture cultural appreciation, and contribute to pre-literacy skills, making them an essential component of a child's holistic growth.