What does a whole-school reading culture look like?
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This academic year started a whole new chapter for schools but how can we better promote a healthy reading culture? Storyteller and educational trainer, Alec Williams shares his top tips for building your school reading culture to inspire every child to become a reader.
âIf I visited your schoolâ, I often ask teachers and school librarians, âwould I know that itâs a school that values reading⌠before I got to the library?â (This assumes the libraryâs lively, well-stocked, welcoming, and used). âWould I see photographs of a recent author visit on your entrance areaâs computer screen? Would I see, at childâs-eye level in the corridors, jumbled book titles, âchildrenâs picksâ, and author bios? Are there poems in unusual places, like the back of toilet cubicle doors?
Yes, itâs certainly possible to see signs of a reading culture, but you can use other senses too. If I asked a child what book theyâd last read or heard â or if I stopped a teacher with the same question â would I get a good answer? I hope youâd also be able to hear class teachers reading aloud (maybe serialising books, a chapter a day), along with hearing book recommendations from staff and children at assembly time. Thereâs also, to borrow from Paul Simon, âthe sound of silenceâ, as children and their class teacher all read their books together in DEAR, ERIC, STAR, or other acronymed reading times.
Finally, thereâs that sixth sense â an intangible atmosphere about the place. âThe animation of the kids⌠the sense of intellectual life in the corridorsâ, as author Anthony Horowitz put it. What keeps me enthusing about reading has something of the same intangible quality; personally I donât need reports, surveys and yet more evidence, itâs a feeling in my gut, borne of being encouraged as a child, being a reader myself, and still discovering great childrenâs fiction today (most recently Sophie Andersonâs The Girl who speaks Bear and M G Leonardâs The Highland Falcon Thief), that keeps me proselytising to teachers and âwaving and ravingâ books to young audiences. A reading culture is not just seen and heard, but felt.
The whole school â everywhere and everyone
Youâll notice I used the full phrase in this blogâs title â a âwhole-schoolâ reading culture. Everyone should be involved; it canât be âMrs Jones versus the othersâ, or âyes, Key Stage 1 are good at thatâ. If youâre appointing a âReading Championâ, make sure that those âothersâ donât ease off and leave it to the champ. We all need to be reading champions!
Also, itâs so easy to say âour school provides a reading cultureâ. Your website might say that (it probably says youâre passionate about it!), but donât commit the politicianâs sin of over-promising and under-delivering. Make it real: part of the school development plan, with the Headâs support, and parent/governor involvement. And make it wide: TAs, school meals staff, caretakers â any of them can remember a favourite book, recommend a book, and talk about what theyâre reading to a child or grandchild. And thatâs even before we get to guestsâŚ
Today we have a very special visitorâŚ
Your schoolâs reading culture may be more on show some days than others â and I donât mean simply before visits by inspectors, government officials or other ordeals! A well-planned and followed-up school visit, by an author, illustrator, storyteller or other âbook world guestâ can make a huge impact on children â and on the staff who are listening in, too. Your local library service should know of authors whoâve visited your area, or colleagues and friends might be able to recommend people. You can often approach potential guests directly, through their websites, or you could try author agencies:Â Â is just one example, and there are several more.
Balance these visits by guests from the local community: a firefighter, a local councillor, a parent, a local sportsperson. Children would expect an author to say âreadingâs great!â, but when this message is repeated by âordinary citizensâ, theyâll realise that thereâs a whole community out there who enjoy reading; that itâs not something that just their teachers tell them.
A library with classrooms around it
Having worked in libraries for around 120 years (remember Iâm also a storyteller, so I may exaggerate), youâd expect me to mention school libraries. My definition of a school is âa library with classrooms round itâ, and thereâll be a blog entry in future about libraries, never fear! In the meantime, here are a few well-chosen words, and some questions:
- Is your classroom book collection in good shape and inviting, or muddled and unloved?
- Is it propped up by your own book purchases?
- Hands up if your school libraryâs a bit moribund and ignored (then put it right)
- Bringing books together saves money, shows the need for order, and breeds library-savvy children
- Children may learn to read in the classroom, but in the school library they learn to be readers.
Readers are made by readers
Although youâll see mentions of role models earlier in this piece, I want to reinforce it at the end because itâs arguably the most important point to make. I appreciate that not every teacher has the time or inclination to be a voracious reader, but find out who the book fans are, and try to achieve a critical mass of teachers whoâll inspire children to read by talking about their own reading and asking them about theirs. Thereâll be teachers who have out-of-school interests with reading attached, and you may discover closet science fiction fans, or other genre buffs, who can pass on their obsession to a new generation. In author Geraldine McCaughreanâs succinct words: âBe seen reading. If you donât, they wonâtâ.
Iâm convinced â where else do I look?
This article has included some of my guiding principles and favourite ideas, but there are many more in the freely-downloadable , which I wrote for the School Library Association. Let me also pay credit to some other people whose ideas you ought to look at. Writer  piece, for instance, or Norfolk teacher Jon Biddleâs hilarious but provoking mirror-image piece, . Get Everyone Reading also lists some key books, websites, and social media sources of ideas. If youâre lucky enough to have a school library service, start there first.
And in between your reading, try a âvisual auditâ of your school, looking for what your own reading culture looks like. Then improve it. Good luck!
Talking point: enthuse more than you use
Throughout the history of childrenâs books there have been educators whoâve used fiction for teaching or social purposes (and authors whoâve written books, sometimes with this in mind). Weâre currently in an age where fictionâs social benefits are much touted: of course books can help with wellbeing and mental health; of course they can develop empathy, promote and demonstrate diversity, and so on; these are positive benefits that children will get from either a few spotlighted books, or (more subtly) from a generous and wide reading diet anyway.
But if fewer children are reading for pleasure, those spotlighted books will loom larger in their reading diet, maybe occupying most of it, and the wider landscape of unalloyed, âmessage-freeâ, read-what-you-like fiction may get diluted. The books that are most likely to create readers beyond school â adventure, funny, scary, sport and animal stories; non-fiction too â if promoted with zeal by knowledgeable teachers and librarians, will develop a real habit of reading. And itâs the memory of those reading experiences (and those adult role models) that will create adult readers. Other than one-to-one occasions, use any âprescription fictionâ approach sensitively, whilst enthusing even more about the sheer escapism and fun of all those authors and series â yes, even the âcheap and cheerfulâ ones â that hopefully line your school library and classroom shelves.
Alec Williams is a speaker, trainer and storyteller.
More information on Alec can be found at: www.alecwilliams.co.uk
Further reading
Explore our English and Literacy resources for International schools
This blog post was originally posted on the ĂŰĚŇapp UK Schools website