1
Number of books Months ahead or behind 12.2 months behind 0-10 11-25 26-100 101-200 201-500 500+ DO BOOKS AT HOME HELP? Source: Read on. Get on. report -40% -20% 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% eBooks Text msgs Instant msgs Blogs Websites Social network msgs Fiction in print Non-fiction in print Poetry in print WHAT KIDS READ % change 2010-2013 MUMS V DADS Difference in reading skills age 11 Frequency Reading with mum Reading with dad Daily Several times a week Once or twice a week Once or twice a month Less often than once a month Not at all 0 -0.4 -1.9 -1.5 -6.1 -7.3 0 -0.3 -2.1 -3 -6 -13.5 THE LITERACY GAP Sourc e: National Country Score Czech Republic Italy Estonia France Poland Spain Austria Denmark Finland Ireland USA Germany Slovak Republic Netherlands Sweden N. Ireland England 10 14 14 16 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 26 27 28 30 30 Years 1.4 2 2 2.3 2.7 2.8 3 3.1 3.3 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.7 3.9 4 4.2 4.2 4.7 months behind 0 months behind 5.2 months ahead 8.9 months ahead 13 months ahead England has one of the biggest gaps in literacy between employed & unemployed adults. The bigger the “score”, the bigger the number of years’ education needed to catch up. bcdefghijklmnop bcdefghijklmnop klmnopqrstuvwx klmnopqrstuvw bcdefghijklmnop mnopqrstuvwxyz ghijklmnopqrstuv G G E ET T KIDS KIDS G G G E ET T KIDS KIDS G 45% £43bn 7yrs £10k of low-income white boys don’t read well aged 11 Cost to UK economy of kids' illiteracy by 2025 Extra schooling gap between best and worst 10-year-olds A quarter of people who earn this are “functionally illiterate” . . . HERE’S how to encourage your kids to read for ten minutes a day. Read to them, read with them or let them read on their own. Q A LITTLE reading every day is better than less frequent, longer reading. Kids who read for a few minutes daily improve more. Q BOOKS and stories are important, but read- ing anything counts. Q LET your child choose their own reading — it is more likely they will enjoy it. Q TRY to integrate reading into everyday life, on the bus or watching TV. The demon reader . . . comic and kids’ author David Walliams, who is backing campaign By SHARON HENDRY, LUKE HEIGHTON and RHODRI PHILLIPS READING for just ten min- utes a day can massively improve children’s literacy and today The Sun launches a campaign to help achieve it. A Save the Children-led report reveals we have one of the biggest problems in Europe and face a future in which one in six adults cannot read at standards set for 11-year-olds. The cost to the economy is currently an estimated £18billion a year. By 2025 that could well have risen to an annual £43billion. The Sun campaign wants you to encourage your child to read for ten minutes a day books, websites, almost anything. To help, we will give away nine ebooks over the next two months and in Saturday’s Sun we will print the first of a series of stories from top authors and celebrities for your child to read. X Factor judge and Little Britain star David Walliams, a supporter of Save the Children, is one of those joining forces with The Sun. He said: “This country is falling behind in literacy levels so it’s so important for children to get help. “Reading shouldn’t be a chore. It’s a lovely connection you can have with your children, both painting the picture in your heads.” He will kick off a series of tales you and your children can read together written by stars in The Sun. We are taking action as the Read On. Get On. coalition of groups, com- munities and schools launch a national mission. It is aimed at ensuring 1.5million kids are not left behind over the next decade with every child born this year reading well by the time they are 11 in 2025. A Read On. Get On. report How Reading Can Help Children Escape Poverty is published today. It shows one in four 11-year-olds in England is unable to read well defined as not only being able to read words but to have a wider understand- ing of the meaning behind them and be able to comment on them. The report says our kids are the worst readers in Europe bar Roma- nia. And we lag behind Bulgaria, Slovak Republic and Lithuania for reading inequality — the gap between the best and worst readers at ten. The 49-page study highlights the links between poverty and poor read- ing, and how a circle of misery is completed when children who cannot read well become adults and can find only low-paid jobs. From 2005 to 2013, 40 per cent of children on free school meals were unable to read well. Poor white boys were less likely to read well than boys from similar backgrounds who speak English as a second language, and 45 per cent of low-income white boys were unable to read well by age 11. The gap between the best and worst ten-year-old readers was equal to seven years extra schooling. A quarter of people who earn less than £10,000 a year were not “func- tionally literate” compared with fewer than one in 25 for those earn- ing more than £30,000. Meanwhile half of prison inmates had a reading age of less than 11. The study also found that reading daily to a five-year-old means that child will be almost half a year ahead in their reading compared to a child read to less than once a week. And children read to regularly by their fathers are far less likely to fall behind. Other members of the coali- tion are Newcastle University, Nat- ional Literacy Trust, Teach First, booktrust, the National Association of Head Teachers, HarperCollins, Cen- tre Forum, Beanstalk, Achievement for All, I CAN, The Publishers Associ- ation and The Reading Agency. Education Secretary Nicky Morgan said: “I wholeheartedly endorse this campaign. Eradicating illiteracy and innumeracy is central to our plan for education. That plan is working. How- ever we know there is more to do.” With The Sun joining in, former SAS hero and writer Andy McNab will talk about his role as an ambassador for adult literacy campaign Six Book Challenge. And in coming weeks we will be sending The Sun Book Bus to your community. Save The Children boss Justin Forsyth said: “We want every child to be given a fair and equal chance to learn to read well. We applaud The Sun for getting behind this campaign, and look forward to working with its readers to restore literacy to its right- ful levels in the UK.” National Association of Head Teach- ers chief Russell Hobby added: “This new campaign has the potential to make a real difference to the lives of Britain’s youngest readers.” The Book Trust’s Viv Bird said: “Get- ting parents involved is crucial. “All the evidence shows that what- ever their background, young children whose parents read to them regularly perform better at school in reading, writing and even in maths. The more they are read to, the deeper and longer- lasting the effects.” National Literacy Trust director Jonathan Douglas added: “This is a game-changing moment for literacy. “We hope everyone will play their part to energise our campaign and give every child leaving school in 2025 the vital skills they need to reach their full potential in life.” [email protected] The Sun Says — Page Six 63% 63% would rather would rather play on a computer play on a computer than read than read 63% would rather play on a computer than read 12% 12% of children don’t of children don’t think reading is think reading is important important 12% of children don’t think reading is important By LUKE HEIGHTON THREE-QUARTERS of children say they would like to read more with their parents. It was one of the stats to emerge from a Sun survey showing one in five parents never read to their kids before they go to bed despite it being a way to boost brainpower. Eight out of ten mums and dads said they do read a bedtime story to their children but of those, one in five did so just once a week. As well as 73 per cent wanting to read more with parents, two-thirds said they would like to read more generally. The same number said they would rather play on a computer game or tablet than read a book. The poll of 2,000 youngsters was conducted exclusively by The Sun and ITV’s Good Morning Britain with One Poll. It found 12 per cent of kids do not think reading well is important for their future, while 18 per cent said they do not enjoy it. Jean Gross CBE is the Government’s former Com- munications Champion for children and an adviser on The Sun’s Literacy Campaign. She said: “The results of the survey don’t surprise me. But I think it is absolutely fantas- tic that three-quarters of children want to read more and we should listen to that and we must do it. It’s getting them interested in reading which is important.” GIVE US STORIES SAY 73% WHAT YOU NEED TO DO BACK our campaign and tell us your reading experiences. Email [email protected] or tweet #ReadOnGetOn #GetKidsReading 8 Monday, September 8, 2014 2G

Read 10 Mins A Day

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Sharon Hendry and David Walliams launch the 'Get Kids Reading' campaign for The Sun Newspaper.

Citation preview

Page 1: Read 10 Mins A Day

Number ofbooks Months aheador behind12.2 monthsbehind0-10

11-2526-100101-200201-500500+

DO BOOKS AT HOME HELP?

Source:Readon.Geton.report

-40%-20%0%20%40%60%80%100%

eBoo

ksText

msgs

Insta

ntms

gsBlo

gsWe

bsites

Socia

lne

tworkms

gsFicti

onin

print

Non-

fictio

nin

print

Poetr

yinprint

WHAT KIDS READ% change 2010-2013

MUMS V DADSDifference in reading skills age 11Frequency Readingwith mum Readingwith dad

DailySeveral timesa weekOnce or twicea weekOnce or twicea monthLess often thanonce a month

Not at all

0-0.4-1.9-1.5-6.1-7.3

0-0.3-2.1-3-6

-13.5

THE LITERACY GAP

Sourc e: National

Country ScoreCzech RepublicItalyEstoniaFrancePolandSpainAustriaDenmarkFinlandIrelandUSAGermanySlovak RepublicNetherlandsSwedenN. IrelandEngland

1014141619202122232425262627283030

Years1.4222.32.72.833.13.33.53.63.73.73.944.24.2

4.7 monthsbehind0 monthsbehind5.2 monthsahead

8.9 monthsahead13 monthsahead

England has one of the biggest gaps in literacybetween employed & unemployed adults. Thebigger the “score”, the bigger the number of

years’ education needed to catch up.

bcdefghijkl

mnop

bcdefghijkl

mnopklmno

pqrstuvwx

klmnopqrstu

vwbcdef

ghijklmnop

mnopqrstuv

wxyz

ghijklmnop

qrstuvabcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyzGGEETT KIDSKIDSGGGEETT KIDSKIDSG

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyzGGGGGGGGGGGabcde

fghijklmnop

qrstuvwxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

abcdefghijk

lmnopqrstuv

wxyz

45% £43bn 7yrs £10kof low-income white boysdon’t read well aged 11

Cost to UK economy ofkids' illiteracy by 2025

Extra schooling gap betweenbest and worst 10-year-olds

A quarter of people who earnthis are “functionally illiterate”. . .

HERE’S how to encourage your kids to read forten minutes a day. Read to them, read withthem or let them read on their own.

QA LITTLE reading every day is better thanless frequent, longer reading. Kids who read

for a few minutes daily improve more.

QBOOKS and stories are important, but read-ing anything counts.

QLET your child choose their own reading —it is more likely they will enjoy it.

QTRY to integrate reading into everyday life,on the bus or watching TV.

The demon reader. . . comic and kids’

author DavidWalliams, who is

backing campaign

By SHARON HENDRY, LUKEHEIGHTON and RHODRI PHILLIPS

READING for just ten min-utes a day can massivelyimprove children’s literacy —and today The Sun launches acampaign to help achieve it.A Save the Children-ledreport reveals we have one ofthe biggest problems in Europeand face a future in which onein six adults cannot read atstandards set for 11-year-olds.The cost to the economy iscurrently an estimated £18billion ayear. By 2025 that could well haverisen to an annual £43billion.The Sun campaign wants you toencourage your child to read for tenminutes a day — books, websites,almost anything.To help, we will give away nineebooks over the next two monthsand in Saturday’s Sun we will printthe first of a series of stories fromtop authors and celebrities for yourchild to read.X Factor judge and Little Britainstar David Walliams, a supporter ofSave the Children, is one of thosejoining forces with The Sun.He said: “This country is fallingbehind in literacy levels so it’s soimportant for children to get help.“Reading shouldn’t be a chore. It’sa lovely connection you can havewith your children, both painting thepicture in your heads.”He will kick off a series of talesyou and your children can readtogether written by stars in The Sun.We are taking action as the ReadOn. Get On. coalition of groups, com-munities and schools launch anational mission.It is aimed at ensuring 1.5millionkids are not left behind over the nextdecade — with every child born thisyear reading well by the time theyare 11 in 2025.A Read On. Get On. report How

Reading Can Help Children EscapePoverty is published today.

It shows one in four 11-year-olds inEngland is unable to read well —defined as not only being able to readwords but to have a wider understand-ing of the meaning behind them andbe able to comment on them.The report says our kids are theworst readers in Europe bar Roma-nia. And we lag behind Bulgaria,Slovak Republic and Lithuania forreading inequality — the gap betweenthe best and worst readers at ten.The 49-page study highlights thelinks between poverty and poor read-ing, and how a circle of misery iscompleted when children who cannotread well become adults and canfind only low-paid jobs.From 2005 to 2013, 40 per cent ofchildren on free school meals wereunable to read well.Poor white boys were less likely toread well than boys from similarbackgrounds who speak English as asecond language, and 45 per cent oflow-income white boys were unableto read well by age 11.The gap between the best andworst ten-year-old readers was equalto seven years extra schooling.A quarter of people who earn lessthan £10,000 a year were not “func-tionally literate” — compared withfewer than one in 25 for those earn-ing more than £30,000. Meanwhile

half of prison inmates had a readingage of less than 11.The study also found that readingdaily to a five-year-old means thatchild will be almost half a yearahead in their reading compared to achild read to less than once a week.And children read to regularly bytheir fathers are far less likely to fallbehind. Other members of the coali-tion are Newcastle University, Nat-

ional Literacy Trust, Teach First,booktrust, the National Associationof Head Teachers, HarperCollins, Cen-tre Forum, Beanstalk, Achievementfor All, I CAN, The Publishers Associ-ation and The Reading Agency.Education Secretary Nicky Morgansaid: “I wholeheartedly endorse thiscampaign. Eradicating illiteracy andinnumeracy is central to our plan foreducation. That plan is working. How-

ever we know there is more to do.”With The Sun joining in, former SAShero and writer Andy McNab will talkabout his role as an ambassador foradult literacy campaign Six BookChallenge.And in coming weeks we will besending The Sun Book Bus to yourcommunity.Save The Children boss JustinForsyth said: “We want every child tobe given a fair and equal chance tolearn to read well. We applaud TheSun for getting behind this campaign,

and look forward to working with itsreaders to restore literacy to its right-ful levels in the UK.”National Association of Head Teach-ers chief Russell Hobby added: “Thisnew campaign has the potential tomake a real difference to the lives ofBritain’s youngest readers.”The Book Trust’s Viv Bird said: “Get-ting parents involved is crucial.“All the evidence shows that what-ever their background, young childrenwhose parents read to them regularlyperform better at school in reading,

writing and even in maths. The morethey are read to, the deeper and longer-lasting the effects.”National Literacy Trust directorJonathan Douglas added: “This is agame-changing moment for literacy.“We hope everyone will play theirpart to energise our campaign and giveevery child leaving school in 2025 thevital skills they need to reach theirfull potential in life.”

[email protected] Sun Says — Page Six

63%63%would ratherwould rather

play on a computerplay on a computerthan readthan read

63%would rather

play on a computerthan read

12%12%of children don’tof children don’tthink reading isthink reading is

importantimportant

12%of children don’tthink reading is

important

By LUKE HEIGHTON

THREE-QUARTERS of children say theywould like to read more with their parents.It was one of the stats to emerge from aSun survey showing one in five parents neverread to their kids before they go to bed —despite it being a way to boost brainpower.Eight out of ten mums and dads said theydo read a bedtime story to theirchildren — but of those, one infive did so just once a week.As well as 73 per centwanting to read more withparents, two-thirds saidthey would like to readmore generally.The same number saidthey would rather play ona computer game or tabletthan read a book.The poll of 2,000 youngsters

was conducted exclusively byThe Sun and ITV’s GoodMorning Britain with OnePoll.It found 12 per cent ofkids do not think readingwell is important for theirfuture, while 18 per centsaid they do not enjoy it.Jean Gross CBE is theGovernment’s former Com-munications Champion forchildren and an adviser on TheSun’s Literacy Campaign.She said: “The results of the survey don’t

surprise me. But I think it is absolutely fantas-tic that three-quarters of children want toread more and we should listen to that andwe must do it. It’s getting them interested inreading which is important.”

GIVE USSTORIESSAY 73%

WHAT YOUNEED TO DO

BACK our campaign and tell us your reading experiences. Email [email protected] or tweet #ReadOnGetOn #GetKidsReading

8 Monday, September 8, 2014 2G