With competition from television and computers, books struggle to win
children's attention. There is a solution at hand, writes Christopher
Bantick.
Saturday, April 23 has been designated by UNESCO as
World Book Day. The idea is simple. By setting aside one day, UNESCO seeks to
promote reading and publishing. It is an entirely appropriate choice of date. On
April 23 in 1616, Cervantes, Shakespeare and Inca Garcilaso de la Vega all died.
Moreover, April 23 is the birthday of Vladimir Nabokov.
Celebrating books
on April 23 originated in Catalonia. On that day, St Georges Day, a rose is
traditionally given as a gift with each book sold. Imagine if this happened in
Melbourne. The moment would be unforgettable.
But World Book Day could
have another purpose. There would appear to be no better day to emphasise the
importance of reading, particularly for children.
For kids, books compete
with the distractions and attractions of the technological age, something that
has concerned Ken Rowe, chairman of the Federal Government's committee exploring
children's reading levels nationally. On his appointment in December, Dr Rowe
said: "One of the things that does make a difference is parents reading to their
children at home and turning off the television. Is that common sense? Yes it
is."
Dr Rowe's view that children should be encouraged to read early
through parental involvement is endorsed by the Australian Council of State
School Organisations. The council represents more than 2 million parents of
children at government schools. In a submission to Dr Rowe's committee, the
council noted: "To wait until a child enters school is to be behind the eight
ball, a situation which might never be remedied for some children even by the
most effective teaching at school."
To achieve better reading performance
before school, the council has called for publishers and federal and state
governments to jointly fund a national home reading campaign. The cost? About
$40 million annually.
Joining the debate over uneven reading competence
in schools, the Victorian Primary Principals Association last month called on
the Victorian Government to provide an extra 68 cents a day for every child in
years 2 to 6 who needs assistance with reading.
Why should this be
necessary? Well, according to association president Fred Ackerman, Victorian
schools do not receive state government funding for literacy intervention
programs after year 1.
Bearing in mind the Victorian Curriculum and
Assessment Authority figures which show that 10 per cent of children in year 5
are not reading at the benchmark level, 68 cents does not seem
exorbitant.
Underpinning the motivation of federal Education Minister
Brendan Nelson to probe national reading standards lie some disturbing figures.
In May last year, it was shown that 24,000 year 3 children, including 6470 in
Victoria, had failed to meet the national benchmark in reading and basic
literacy.
In 2003, in Victoria, one in five year 10 students could not
read easily. Imagine if 20 per cent of a car manufacturer's cars were faulty or
20 per cent of supermarket eggs were risky. The public outcry would be
deafening.
Add to this the fact that according to a 2002 OECD survey,
poor reading ability has a knock-on effect. More than 48 per cent of Australian
adults had problems with reading and writing.
Given that the problem with
some children's ability to read has been well diagnosed for several years, what
is the remedy? It may come down simply to ensuring reading is a pleasurable
activity. In this, schools would appear to have a critical
responsibility.
Research in Britain points to one clear outcome: if the
pleasure of reading diminishes, so do literacy levels. The idea of "here's the
book, now write the essay" is a sure way to kill the joy of books.
At
least this is the view of David Bell, chief inspector of schools in England.
Promoting World Book Day, Mr Bell observed in a speech reported in the Times
Educational Supplement last month: "Teachers are using poems as literacy
manuals, mining them for their use of adjectives and metaphor so that the beauty
of the language is lost.
"If we don't expect pupils to engage
passionately with what they read, why should we be surprised when we can't see
the point of taking a book home?"
Australian studies support the
essential aspect of pleasure being associated with reading competence. In a
report titled Influences on Achievement in Literacy and Numeracy, the
Australian Council for Educational Research's Longitudinal Surveys of Australian
Youth said in October 2003: "Enjoyment of reading has been associated with the
literacy levels of students in primary schools and junior secondary schools.
Similarly, higher levels of determination to do well, confidence and
self-efficacy has been associated with higher levels of reading literacy among
15-year-olds."
Perhaps what has to be reclaimed on World Book Day is the
essential joy books and reading can give. Francis Spufford, the UK Sunday
Times Young Writer of the Year in 1997, highlighted the unique pleasure
reading gives in her 2002 book, The Child that Books
Built.
"There were times when a particular book, like a seed
crystal, dropped into our minds when they were exactly ready for it, like a
supersaturated solution, and suddenly we changed. Suddenly a thousand crystals
of perception of our own formed, the original insight of the story ordering
whole arrays of discoveries inside us, winking accuracy."
Deny a child
this, and you deny the world.
Christopher Bantick is a Melbourne
writer.