All About the Books (original) (raw)

How can parents and educators turn the page on kids who are reading less and computing more?

In a world full of distraction — Minecraft, anyone? — should we be worried about how many books kids are reading these days?

According to a biannual reading poll from Scholastic, the answer is a resounding yes.

As reported by the Boston Globe on February 16, Scholastic’s 2014 poll of more than 2,500 parents and children “found that the number of kids ages 6–17 who frequently read books for fun (5–7 days a week) is lower than it was four years ago — down to 31 percent from 37 percent. While more than half (53 percent) of kids ages 6–8 are frequent readers, that figure falls to just 14 percent for kids ages 15–17.”

As role models, parents aren’t doing much better. The percentage of parents with children ages 6–17 who read frequently is also down, from 28 percent in 2010 to 21 percent in 2014.

In addition to Scholastic’s own suggested remedies, Harvard Graduate School of Education faculty members Joe Blatt, Nonie Lesaux, and Catherine Snow compiled a comprehensive distillation of literacy research into a short guidebook titled Encouraging Your Child to Read. Here are their age-appropriate suggestions:

Your Baby (birth–18 months)

What to know:

How to help:

Benchmarks:

Your Toddler (18 months–3 years)

What to know:

How to help:

Benchmarks:

Your Toddler/Preschooler (3–5 years)

What to know:

How to help:

Benchmarks:

Your Early Elementary Student (grades K–2)

What to know:

How to help:

Benchmarks:

Your Upper Elementary Student (grades 3–5)

What to know:

How to help:

Benchmarks:

Your Young Teen (grades 6-9)

What to know:

How to help:

Benchmarks:

Supporting Your Child’s Success

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