How to Make Reading a Habit
Ask Daryl, the Volunteer Librarian at Family ACCESS, to tell you a story, and you will get as many as you could possibly want.
“We have so many wonderful children’s books. It’s unique for an Early Learning Center like this to have such a large library,” she notes.
During National Reading Month, we asked Daryl, who served for 24 years as the coordinator of children’s books for the Cambridge Public Library, about the importance of reading to your kids at home. She pointed to numerous studies that show reading is essential for preschoolers. Those include a 2019 study at Ohio State University that found young children whose parents read them five books a day enter kindergarten having heard 1.4 million more words than those who were never read to. Also, a 20-year research project at the University of Nevada found that having books in the home (as few as 20 age-appropriate books) increased the level of education a child in that home reached.
“It’s vital. It really makes a difference in how they do in school,” says Daryl. She offers these tips to help engage your toddler or preschooler in reading.
- Have a Routine: For some families, it’s a story before bedtime. For others, it might be when dinner is cooking. Make reading a scheduled part of the day.
- Have Books at the Ready: It’s important, Daryl says, to have age-appropriate books around the house, at their level, so your child can pick them up on their own. They may look through it themselves or ask for a family member to read it to them.
- Help Them Participate: Even if you do all the reading, children love to take part. They often will want to turn the pages themselves or point out an illustration that excites them.
“Reading together can add a lot to your relationship with your child because you are sharing the experience of that story with them,” explains Daryl. “From that point on, if you see something that reminds you of the book, you’ll both be able to say, ‘that’s just like in the story!’”
Anthony Marino Confident for Marathon Next Week
One week from today, on Monday, March 20th, Anthony will be standing near the starting line in Hopkinton, MA, alongside a crowd of 30,000 other runners. He’s running in his first Boston Marathon, raising money for Family ACCESS programs.
“I’m so excited. I’ve felt great the last few weeks, tapering my training runs and visualizing my race plan. I’m ready to go!” exclaims an enthusiastic Anthony.
To help Anthony get ready, kids ages 5–11 from a neighborhood program called Service Stars put together a goodie box for all those running, like Anthony. The box included non-perishable snacks, a Vaseline tube, and a woobie blanket for temperature control.
“The support and love I’ve received has been incredible. Family and friends can’t stop talking about how excited they are to visit Boston and cheer me on,” notes Anthony. “It’s overwhelming in the best way.”
To follow Anthony during his journey through the 26.2 mile course, you can download the free B.A.A. mobile app and put in Anthony’s bib number – 30685. You’ll be able to track his progress and root for him as he’s on route through the Marathon’s eight towns and cities.
“I know that after months of training and fundraising, crossing that finish line for Family ACCESS will mean the world to me,” he says.
Anthony has only reached 46 percent of his funding goal. Can you help?
Donate here: https://www.givengain.com/campaign/support-anthony
Annual Diaper Drive with Newton Neighbors
Diaper Drive
Family ACCESS is excited to, once again, support our non-profit partner Newton Neighbors with their Mother’s Day Weekend Diaper Collection and Distribution.
Last year, they collected and distributed more than 53,000 diapers to community members in need!
If you are interested in donating, diapers can be dropped off at:
Family ACCESS, 492 Waltham St., Newton, MA 02465, between 8:00 am and 6:00 pm inside the front door until April 30th.
Diapers will be distributed at:
Family ACCESS and at American Legion Nonantum, Post 440 at 296 California St., Newton, MA 02458, between 7:30 am and 12:30 pm on Saturday, May 9th.

Raising a Reader
When Lisa Bennett reads to preschoolers, she is instilling a skillset that helps children be more successful in their educational efforts and in life.
“Reading should feel like a shared experience,” notes Lisa Bennett, a Play Group Facilitator with Family ACCESS Community Connections. “When I read, I like to slow down and really invite children into the story. I pause to ask what they notice in the picture and what the characters might do next. They stay more engaged and build confidence in their ideas.”
Dialogic Reading, or asking good questions, is the basis of a nationwide program called Raising A Reader, an evidence based early literacy program with an end goal to help families develop, practice and maintain routines of shared reading at home.
“In addition to our Newton Early Learning Center, Family ACCESS offers several community-based programs that help build literacy rich homes throughout the ten communities we serve,” notes Jodi Levin, MSW, M.Ed, Coordinated Family and Community Engagement (CFCE) Program Coordinator. “Along with giving hundreds of books to families throughout the year, our facilitators continuously model strategies to help parents and caregivers engage children in conversation around books.”
Raising A Reader provides a rotating library of high-quality children’s literature that families can bring home each week, encouraging children and parents to develop the habit of shared reading. It is integrated into our CFCE program Community Connections, which is an EEC funded grant program at Family ACCESS, that offers parent education programs, parent/child playgroups, literacy programs and referrals to community resources. Also part of Family ACCESS, the ParentChild+ program, is an intensive home visiting service providing structured, in-home support for low to moderate income families of young children to help build strong foundations for learning and school readiness.
“During home visits, we gift families with a new book or toy each week and model for parents how to engage their child with those materials,” explains Jodi. “The idea is to help parents feel comfortable and confident as their child’s first and best teacher.”
In the classrooms at Family ACCESS, children are invited to engage with the facilitator to be part of the story telling. Lisa asks lots of questions as she reads to pull the kids in. Using dialogic reading strategies allows adults and children to have conversations about a book, turning reading into an interactive dialogue where the child leads, promoting vocabulary and language skills.
“It also helps strengthen comprehension,” adds Lisa. “Most importantly, it helps children see books as something fun and interactive rather than something they just sit and listen to.”
Meet Our Volunteer Librarian
Once upon a time, Daryl was a children’s librarian at the Cambridge Public Library. As Coordinator of Children’s Services, she worked with the children’s librarians at seven locations, planned system wide programs like summer reading club, offered story times to local families, talked with parents about the importance of literacy, and invited authors to visit. After 24 years, she closed that chapter of her career and retired. Until recently.
“A friend at my church told me that Family ACCESS had assembled this incredible library and was looking for some help organizing things,” explains Daryl, who was eventually asked to visit. “I am so impressed by the teachers and the volunteers who put together this beautiful resource.”
Daryl now serves as Volunteer Librarian, coming into the Early Learning Center three times per month to get the students excited about reading. Many of the books were donated and some were the result of grants, she says.
“The children really enjoy it. I mean, who doesn’t like a good story?” notes Daryl.
During her first session with the classes, she started with a simple question.
“What is a library?” she asked.
“A place where there are books,” the children enthusiastically answered.
“And what is in a book?” Daryl probed.
“Words and pictures,” responded the class.
“Words and pictures make up stories, and there are a lot of wonderful stories in our library for you to enjoy,” Daryl explained.
Daryl includes rhymes and movement to “get students engaged.” When she reads a story, she often asks questions along the way.
“I’ll ask things like, ‘what do you see?’ or ‘what animal is this?’ to help them feel involved in the process,” Daryl says.
The books are available for Family ACCESS parents and students to take home and return – no typical library check-out procedure necessary. Daryl says she has enjoyed meeting the staff and families at the school and couldn’t be happier to be back sharing favorite children’s stories with these young learners.
“Books really open up the imagination and that’s fun to witness,” she says.
Anthony: On Course For Success
Training runs. Daily stretching. Cutting out the sweets. With a little more than four weeks to go to the start of the 130th Boston Marathon, Anthony Marino says that physically, he’s feeling great.
“Overall, my excitement has just been growing,” says Anthony, who is running to raise awareness and funds for Family ACCESS. “There are definitely nerves, but that’s because it’s the culmination of all the work that has been put in.”
Anthony has slowly stepped up the mile count as he has trained over the last few months. He was thrilled when he reached his training goal of 20 miles a few Sundays ago. A full marathon route is 26.2 miles.
“This was my longest run to date and a bit of a dress rehearsal for the big race! I could feel it when I got to mile 18,” he explains. “From here on, I will lower my distances leading up to the marathon so I don’t burn out.”
Anthony says he’s doing his best to physically and mentally prepare for Heartbreak Hill, the three to five percent grade incline in the course that he’ll hit around mile 20 in Newton. Fortunately, that stretch has plenty of personal meaning to keep him running strong.
“I get to run past my alma mater Boston College right after so I’m hoping that will give me a rush,” he notes. “The last six miles are going to be tough, but I’ll be running through the neighborhoods I used to live in – during school and immediately after school, then my office is at mile 25. I know the nostalgia and crowds will give me that extra boost.”
Anthony needs some help to reach his fundraising goal for Family ACCESS. So far, he’s reached 41 percent of that goal.
“I love spreading awareness for Family ACCESS and getting my friends and family involved,” he beams. “It all makes eventually crossing that finish line all the better.”
Donate to Anthony’s run now.
DONATE NOW
Digging Deep – Anthony’s Marathon Update
In less than two months, Anthony Marino will take on a challenge he’s never faced before: a full 26.2-mile marathon. While Anthony is focused on crushing his personal goals on the Boston course, he is also running to champion the mission of Family Access, helping serve local children and families.
“So far, New England weather had been my greatest obstacle. Snow and ice make it difficult to find routes that are safe enough to run,” says Anthony. “I have a small, 1.5 mile route around my neighborhood, and I definitely got some looks as people saw me run it over and over again one weekend.”
Overall, Anthony notes, training is going well and his body feels strong.
“The last three weekends have been predominantly built around my longer runs, which have been between 15 and 18 miles. Before this training, a half marathon (13 miles) was the longest continuous run I had ever completed, and now I’m doing that and then some every week,” he explains.
Recently, Anthony had a chance to come to Family ACCESS for a tour and to meet some of the children and staff.
“All the kids were so nice and welcoming. I loved seeing how each class has its own creative identity. Seeing the phenomenal work being done, reinforced the importance of this fundraising,” he says. “My visit made me further appreciate how much we’re all a team for this race.”
For now, Anthony continues to refill his stock of energy gels (fuel endurance packets). He’s learned he needs more than the one he takes before his run, as the distances become greater.
“Now I have to open one mid-run, as well,” he explains, adding, “Trying to open them in the cold is a whole other challenge!”
With just two months to go before the 130th Boston Marathon, Anthony has raised 30 percent of his goal for Family ACCESS. Can you help?
Training Off to a Slippery Start for Runner Marino
Anthony Marino, who in April will run his first ever marathon, says he is on track with his training, despite the recent crazy, New England weather.
“Waking up early to run is never easy, let alone when it’s below 20 degrees,” notes Anthony, who is running the Boston Marathon to raise money for Family ACCESS. “The biggest setback happened at the beginning of January when rain froze overnight and the sidewalks around my house were dangerous. I ran on the road as much as I could, mindful of local traffic, but took a slip.”
The fall wasn’t too bad, but Anthony says the bruise served as a painful reminder of the incident for a few days. Overall, the training is helping him build confidence, and he even thinks he may beat the original goal time he set for himself.
“My wife, Emily, has been especially great. She keeps me honest about getting up early to train and makes sure I prioritize my recovery, too,” says Anthony. “I feel like I’m progressing well and will get to that finish line.”
So far, Anthony has only reached 13 percent of his fundraising goal for Family ACCESS. You can help cheer him on by donating here. (https://www.givengain.com/campaign/support-anthony)


