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Summer Reading Programs with Impact
Heather DieffenbachKentucky Department for Libraries and Archives
January 2014
Summer Reading
Programs Reading Logs Prizes Drawings Promotions School Visits Media Attention
Stretched Staffing Decorations End of Summer Parties Summer Reading Store Performers Work More Work Even More Work
Why?
Summer Slide How can reading help with Summer Slide? How do Summer Reading Programs fit in? What are some other benefits of Summer Reading? What are some SRP best practices? Summer Reading goals? What are some challenges in running successful
SRP’s? Summer Reading in Kentucky
Why?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ahhj3wxxkdM
Summer Slide
Middle SES students make gains reading recognition tests over summer while low SES students make losses.
Summer vacations create a reading gap of about 3 months between middle and low SES students.
Summer Slide
Children make pretty much the same rate of reading skills improvement during the school year. Krashen and Shin
As much as 80% of the reading skills gap between children from low and high SES families in sixth grade can be attributed to summer slide. Hayes and Grether
Summer Slide
“The single summer activity that is most strongly and consistently related to summer learning is reading.”
Barbara Heyns
“Regardless of other activities, the best predictor of summer loss or summer gain is whether or not a child reads during the summer.
Anne McGill-Frazen and Richard Allington
What can be done about Summer Slide?
The best predictor of whether a child reads is whether or not he or she owns books.
Anne McGill-Frazen and Richard Allington
61% of low incomes families have no children’s books at home.
Low income families have on average 4 children’s books in their homes.
What Does the Research Say?
90% of fifth grade students devoted only 1% of their free time to reading
50% read for an average of four minutes or less per day
10% read nothing at allFiore, Summer Library Reading Programs
How Much Are They Reading?
Children who spend about one minute per day reading score in the 10th percentile on standardized tests.
Children who spend about 11 minutes per day reading score in the 50th percentile.
Children who spend approximately 38 minutes ready per day score in the 90th percentile.
Fiore, Summer Library Reading Programs
Reading Improves Reading Ability
“More than any other public institution, including the schools, the public library contributed to the intellectual growth of children during the summer.”
Barbara Heyns
Where Do Library Summer Reading Programs Come In?
The effect of summer reading on achievement was equal to the effect of summer school.
Richard Allington
Benefits of Summer Reading
Make connections across our communities.
Promote the cultural resources of the community.
Expose children to culture outside of their community.
Benefits: Community and Culture
Five components of reading motivation among young children (elementary and middle school): Interest Perceived Control Self-Efficacy Involvement Social Collaboration
Benefits: SRP’s Promote Social Aspects of Reading
Summer library reading programs provide experiences through which children, their parents, teachers, and caregivers can delight in sharing perceptions gained from literature.
Carole Fiore
Benefit: SRP’s Promote Social Aspects of Reading
The schools focus on reading skills, libraries focus on enrichment, enjoyment, and sharing a LOVE of reading.
All children need to have experiences that show reading as an integral part of life, not just a skill that is needed in school.
Carole Fiore
Benefit: Promote a LOVE of Reading
One of the main purposes of any Summer Reading Program is to motivate children to read.
What does the research say about reading motivation?
Reading Motivation
Extrinsic Motivation: Studying to get a good grade Studying in order to avoid getting a bad grade Playing a sport to win an award or scholarship Reading in order to win a prize or get attention from a
librarian
Intrinsic Motivation Studying to learn more about a subject that fascinates you Playing a sport because you enjoy it Reading to learn more about an interesting subject or
because you enjoy it.
Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation
Incentives Praise more motivating than prizes Tangible rewards can increase momentary
participation Undermine the development of intrinsic motivation
Rewards related to the task do not decrease intrinsic motivation and can communicate the value of the task
Gradually decrease reward
Summer Reading Best Practices: Incentives
Don’t throw the baby out with the bath water!
Summer Reading Best Practices--Incentives
CORI Hands-on activities to spark
interest Immediately after activity
students come up with questions they want to investigate
Teacher directs students to the appropriate books to help locate the answers
CORI Research
If possible, phase out tangible prizes with reading related rewards, verbal praise, and social recognition
If you find yourself thinking, “If I don’t give incentives, no one will come,” ask yourself what that says about the children’s real motivation and the program’s real effect.
Suzanne M. Stauffer
Summer Reading Best Practices
Incentive path--What do you have to do to get the reward or “finish” the program?
Which incentive path has the best results? Fawson:
Number of pages Number of books Number of minutes Genre wheel
Summer Reading Best Practices--Incentive Paths
Choice improves motivation.
“The research has absolutely nothing good to say about forcing hard reading on kids. Why should we be surprised? If adults preferred hard reading, The Economist would be flying off the shelves of 7-Elevens.”
Richard Allington
Summer Reading Best Practices--Choice
Richard Allington: The experimental treatment group, which
received the summer books for three consecutive summers, reported more often engaging in voluntary summer reading and had significantly higher reading achievement than the control group.
Summer Reading Best Practices--Participation Over Time Makes SRP’s
Even More Effective
Students gained several points on standardized reading tests in the fall after reading as few as five books over the summer. James Kim
California—5 Book Summer Challenge
Summer Reading Best Practices—5 Books
Schools as participants: No Child Left Behind Summer Reading Achievers pilot program in Connecticut gave its schools cash incentives if 60 % of their students turn in a summer reading journal.
Teacher collaboration: In one Illinois district, children win prizes by leaving messages on the school’s answering machine, reading from books or summarizing them.
Summer Reading Best Practices—School Collaboration
Postcards with teacher—80% send at least one postcard
Teachers giving away books and guided reading lessons in parks—72% of the second graders retained their skills
Summer Reading Best Practices—School Collaboration
Service Reading Sponsors pledge money for the amount of time
a child spends reading Have children choose a different cause every
year Heroes theme 2015 Great for teens and tweens
Summer Reading Best Practices—Altruism
Why set goals and objectives for Summer
Reading Programs?
Summer Reading Program Goals
Preschool School-Age Teens Adult--Parent/Caregiver
Different Goals for Different Ages
Build positive attitudes about reading. SRP games Providing links to reading at programs FUN—easy to participate and complete
Boost dialogic reading Encourage book sharing and not just amount read Encourage quality of interactions—not number of
books Encourage daily reading to child
Incorporates daily reading activities Calendar format
Preschool Goals
Maintain reading skills over the summer Encourage reading 5 books
Build or maintain intrinsic reading motivation Give books and praise—not trinkets Encourage free choice in reading
Target struggling readers Collaborate with schools Target at risk kids—take program to them
School Age Goals
Motivation to read declines as students enter middle school.
Teens have many other options for summer activities and more freedom.
Teens are forming their view of themselves and world around them.
Teens may have school summer reading requirements.
Teens and Summer Reading
Build or maintain reading motivation Have a social aspect to the program Creative format
Work with busy schedules Opportunities for online participation (tracking
online or by app, Tumblr, etc.) Help teens build their image of themselves
as readers Provide them with a chance to meet with other
readers—use fandoms Let them use their school required reading
Teen Goals
Encourage parent/caregiver to read to child Allow adults to count time they
spend reading to someone else Encourage opportunities for child
to see parent/caregiver reading Give adults extra credit for reading
alongside someone else Encourage daily or frequent
reading
Parent/Caregiver Goals
Programming Goals
Promote the cultural resources of the community.
Expose children to culture outside of their community.
Foster a community of readers
Celebrate reading Bring people into the
library Raise awareness of library
Informational programming—teach something
Promote library collection Entertainment—the
library is a fun place Early literacy Give kids safe options for
activities More…
Lack of research to guide us Doing research on this topic is difficult Preaching to the choir Struggling readers are not good at choosing
appropriate books
Challenges to Summer Reading Success
More girls than boys participate in summer reading programs
Access to collections in low SES areas--transportation
Working parents/modern schedules Cultural inversion--Ogbu
Challenges to Summer Reading Success
What percentage of children in your county participate in your Summer Reading Program?
What percentage would you consider to be “successful?”
How do you define “success”?
8% Less restrictions in program
design Stated goals and objectives A marketing strategy Evaluation methods Trained children’s specialists
How do you define “success”?
Average percentage of children reached by KY Public libraries is 9.26%
Child population is decreasing Look at the percentage of children
participating, not the number of children who participated (especially when comparing participation from year to year)
Kentucky Summer Reading
How do children and teens participate in the SRP? What influence does the SRP have on participants’
reading outcomes? Do children and teens of different backgrounds
experience the program and its outcomes differently?
What is the long-term impact of participation in the SRP on children and teen reading outcomes?
Virginia Study: 2014-2015
Heather DieffenbachKDLA502-564-8300 ext. [email protected]
Questions and Comments