Reading
a book 'adds a year to children's education'
Reading
books for half an hour a day could be worth up to 12 months’ extra schooling by
the age of 15, says Nick Gibb, the School Minister. The department of education
has plans for a national reading competition for children. The idea is to boost
literacy standards and encourage children to read. A recent international
report showed that almost four-in-10 teenagers in England never read for
pleasure. Critics criticised the move, because just recently, the Government cut
costs on reading programmes and one-to-one tuition. These critics say that a
competition “will not help the over 9000 children who miss out on one-to-one
tuition this year, due to cuts to reading programmes.
The
government probably thinks that parents, teachers, and foremost; children “will
get spurred on by a bit of healthy competition”. I think it is just an easy way
for the Government, driven by cutting costs, to give the responsibility for
good education away. I believe the competition will work for children who
already read books for pleasure. It’s a long way; from learning to read to
compete in “who can finish the most books”. There are more ways to encourage
children to read; there should be more time planned during school hours for
reading. Why not start the day with half an hour of silence in the whole school,
with everybody reading?
There are several schools which have already started reading in the way you suggest. A condition is that the children are free to read whatever they like.
BeantwoordenVerwijderenAnne Marieke
My pupils read 45 min a day. They are free to read what they want. this time is spread over three times 15 min. This provides more quality than reading for a longer time at once.
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