The Quickest Way to Boost your Child in a Competitive World According to Dolly Parton
Trust me: your child will love you for this.

Kids who first visit our house always say the same thing:
‘You live in a library!’
We don’t, but we love reading. Heaving bookshelves embrace our walls, and books pile up beside our beds. Lucky for our kids, reading is not simply a life-enriching hobby. It will likely give them enduring benefits, something Dolly Parton knows all about.
Let me explain.
Are books beneficial for kids growing up?
Access to books in the home can positively influence your child’s academic success. Why? Because reading will give your child an expansive vocabulary and delivers them a pathway to more knowledge.
But in a world beset with inequality, access to books for kids is never straightforward.
How economic disadvantage affects a child’s literacy.
Research suggests children of disadvantaged backgrounds have less exposure to the written word, with parents of children from a higher economic, social status (high SES) reading 1,000 hours to them before their kids start kindergarten. In contrast, average children of a low SES only receive 25 hours of storytime in that time.
There are many reasons for this discrepancy, with the most obvious one: not enough books in low-income areas. One study shows that in middle-income neighborhoods, one child has access to 13 children’s books, compared to her peers in a low-income area who share one with 299 others.
How many books make a difference in a child’s life?
A 20-year long study demonstrates the difference between being raised in a bookless home and being brought up in a house with a 500-book library is associated with extending the child’s education by 3.2 years.
But even for us, 500 books sounds like a sizeable amount. However, Evans, the lead researcher, and professor of sociology at, University of Nevada, argues that having only 20 books will make a difference. And the more books you add, the higher the benefits. She says:
“You get a lot of ‘bang for your book. It’s quite a good return-on-investment in a time of scarce resources.”
This is something Dolly Parton knows all about
Her Imagination Library, piloted in Tenessee, sends out one book per month to each registered child until they reach five. The books (addressed to each child with a personal message) have encouraged countless parents to read more to their offspring.
Since its launch in 1995, it has gifted 160 million books to kids across Australia, Canada, the United States, the Republic of Ireland, and the United Kingdom. In the US, it puts books into the tiny hands of nearly seven percent of the nations under five.
Any child can apply, regardless of financial background, provided there is a local sponsor.
Dolly’s inspiration
Growing up as one of twelve in rural Appalachia, money was scarce. Her intelligent father couldn’t read or write, and as a child, Dolly witnessed how this impacted his entire life. She wondered:
“God, if he’d had an education, I wonder what all he might’ve been?”
Watch her talking about the man who inspired her:
