Baltimore Sun Sunday

Kids miss out on so much as fewer now read for fun

- By Karin Klein Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

It was Harry Potter — or, actually, his buddy Hermione Granger — who made my 6-year-old granddaugh­ter enthusiast­ic about learning to read.

She was reasonably interested in reading before that, though remote learning during most of her kindergart­en year means she and all the other first-graders at her charter school along the central coast of California aren’t at the pre-pandemic levels of literacy for their age. Then, as my daughter began reading the J.K. Rowling books to her, my granddaugh­ter discovered the girl witch and now is obsessed with books.

Hermione frequents the Hogwarts library and, just for the pleasure of it, absorbs the informatio­n within its books. More often than not, that informatio­n saves the day for her and her friends. My granddaugh­ter wants to be a heroic brainiac just like Hermione.

Of course, she was probably destined to become a lover of reading. Her parents have doctorates in English literature. My daughter probably got much of her love of reading from me. I got it from my father, who dropped out of high school to support his parents and siblings during the Great Depression, but who nonetheles­s made weekly trips to the library throughout his life to borrow a stack of books that he would devour. Family background aside, almost any student can love reading.

As a mother who had three kids in public schools, it always bugged me that the elementary school had a voluntary “reading club” in which students received prizes based on how much reading for pleasure they did each week. The message seems wrong: We have to bribe you to read for fun.

All this comes to mind now that a survey by the National Assessment for Educationa­l Progress — the organizati­on that produces the periodic Nation’s Report Card based on student testing — found that the numbers of 9- and 13-year-olds who regularly read for pleasure had plummeted.

Elementary school children are more likely to read than their older counterpar­ts, according to the survey But still, the number of 9-year-olds who say they read for enjoyment almost every day dropped from slightly more than half in 1984, to

42% during the 2019-20 school year. The trend among middle schoolers is worse. The proportion who frequently read for fun dropped by more than half, to 17%, while the percentage who seldom or never do more than tripled.

(High school students weren’t surveyed because the pandemic arrived before NAEP got around to questionin­g them, but their reading habits were following the same pattern as middle schoolers in earlier years.)

This is worrisome for many reasons. Kids who read for pleasure daily score the highest on reading assessment­s, according to the American Library Associatio­n.

A British study found that reading for pleasure had much wider benefits, resulting in better vocabulary, spelling and mathematic­al abilities. And reading for pleasure was more important to those successes than were students’ socioecono­mic background­s. According to the nonprofit reading-advocacy group Kids Read Now, readers also learn better empathy, decision-making and social skills.

One contributo­r to this dismaying trend seems obvious: Social media and other digital activities are heavy draws and can gobble up hours of time, according to the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n.

But some librarians and students point

to other reasons. As students advance in school, required reading of textbooks and classroom-assigned literature increases. They may be reading more, but often enjoying it less. Add to that the time demanded by structured activities (at least before the pandemic) such as jobs, sports or other extracurri­culars. The homework load also is heavier in high school than in lower grades, often exceeding the recommende­d maximum of two hours a day. It’s easy to see why picking up a magazine or another book doesn’t seem like a great way to decompress.

So if kids are reading social media posts, isn’t that just a modern form of reading for pleasure? And if they’re hitting the schoolbook­s, isn’t that giving them more than enough exposure to the written word?

Obviously, research on the benefits of reading as a hobby show otherwise. As a book lover and writer, my emotional response is that nonreaders are missing out on greater experience­s than social media can give them. The world of the written word, whether it’s found in a leather-bound novel or the digital version of a newspaper, is a rich and wondrous place. We expand our horizons every time we enter deeply personal or imagined worlds

that may change our outlook on life, teach us how to grow our own vegetables, or, like Hermione, offer the secrets to save the world.

The reliance on social media as a reading outlet instead of more authoritat­ive resources is also helping to fuel beliefs among some people in anti-scientific shibboleth­s like vaccines causing autism or no evidence that masks help prevent the spread of COVID-19.

Reading for pleasure isn’t the same as assigned reading because kids need to be able to relax with the reading material of their choice, according to Kids Read Now. As a child, my son used to finish his reading for school and then sigh with pleasure, saying, “Now I can read.”

Parents play a key role in this, but many may not realize how important it is to expose their kids to books, magazines and the like. Robust funding of libraries, dedicated specifical­ly to public outreach, children’s book sections and fun, free activities for families would help. One of the greatest forms of learning parents and teachers can impart to kids is the joy of reading.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY 2004 ?? One of the Harry Potter books is on display at a Clean Well-Lighted Place For Books, a bookstore in San Francisco. The independen­t store closed in 2006.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY 2004 One of the Harry Potter books is on display at a Clean Well-Lighted Place For Books, a bookstore in San Francisco. The independen­t store closed in 2006.

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