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Language Learning with Picture Books

2025.09.30
Photo Credit: KindelMedia@Pexels.com

 

Language learning doesn’t have to be boring or difficult! One enjoyable way to practice is by reading picture books. In this blog, I’ll introduce how you can use picture books to practice English.

Here are some things you can learn from picture books. For each one, I’ll give an example from one of my favorite picture books, Tomatoes for Neela written by Padma Lakshmi and illustrated by Juana Martinez-Neal. You can watch a video of the author reading the book here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gU4T0zrl30Y). This book is about a girl named Neela, and she cooks with her mother.

Dialogue: Picture books often have dialogue between the characters, so you can read a natural conversation. And you can see how sentences are formed in natural, simple ways. In Tomatoes for Neela, the mother says, “Sauce is ready. Want a taste?” and the daughter replies, “Yes!” Furthermore, reading picture books aloud can also improve your speaking skills and help you pronounce new words.

Cultural Understanding: Many picture books reflect the values, traditions, and ways of life from different cultures. In Tomatoes for Neela, for example, tomatoes are “Made into simple pasta sauce or yummy chutney, used to stew beans for chili, or turned into salsa for enchiladas”. This shows how tomatoes are used in dishes from around the world.

 
Vocabulary: Picture books often introduce new words in fun ways. For example, in Tomatoes for Neela, there are illustrations of a variety of foods: dosas, roasted cauliflower, ramen, saffron rice, spicy lentil stew. Also, some unfamiliar words may be explained. In the book, the grandmother explains that heirloom tomatoes “are called ‘heirlooms’ because their seeds are passed down from season to season.”

Interesting language: Furthermore, picture books often use interesting language. For example, sometimes authors use similes, which compare two things with the word “like”. In this book, bright yellow tomatoes are “like the sun” in color, and red, round tomatoes are “like a softball” in shape.

Next time you want to improve your English, try picking up a picture book! You can find them in libraries and even at the bbp. Plus, don’t forget, there are many videos of teachers, librarians, and authors reading picture books online. They are fun way to supplement your studies.

 

 
Blog Quiz:

1.    According to the author, what four things can students learn from reading picture books?

2.    According to the article, what are some dishes which include tomatoes?

3.    What are heirloom tomatoes?

4.    What is a simile? What two examples are given in the article?

 
Scroll ↓ down for the answers to the quiz

 

 

 














Quiz Answers

1.    Dialogue, cultural understanding, vocabulary, and interesting language

2.    Pasta sauce, chutney, chili, salsa

3.    A tomato which is grown from seeds which have been passed down from season to season

4.    A simile compares two things by using the word “like”. Yellow tomatoes are like the sun / Round tomatoes are like a softball

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