Friday, May 27, 2005
The loss of pleasure reading in schools
By Valerie Strauss / The Washington Post

Sherre Sachar comes from a book-loving family. Her father, Louis, is an award-winning
author, and the graduating senior thinks that settling down with a good book should be
one of life's great joys. But as she prepares to leave high school and head to Cornell
University in the fall, she is tired of reading.

The extensive required reading in her Austin, Texas, high school classes -- including
Advanced Placement English Literature, where she flew from one classic to another --
left her with no time to pick up books she thought would be fun. And she was
frustrated by teachers who offered either too little help in understanding the complex
texts or conducted tortured efforts to wring symbolism out of every word.

"I haven't read a book for pleasure in about three years," said Sachar, 18. "If I do, it's
in the summer, and I might only get through one book because I'm so sick of trying to
read. It's not fun anymore."

Allowing students some choice in what they read and helping them understand the
content is a difficult balance to strike for today's teachers, educators say.

With high-stakes standardized testing driving curriculum and teachers increasingly
required to use scripted lesson plans, what is getting lost for many teachers is the
freedom to allow students to explore books of their choosing -- and the time to explore
the meaning, the educators say.

And many students, especially in high school, simply have no time to read what they
want.

"When kids are in high school now, the stakes are so high, and they have so much
homework that it's really hard to find time for pleasure reading," said Dawn Vaughn,
president of the American Association of School Librarians and librarian at Cherry
Creek High School in the Denver suburb of Greenwood Village. "And it is so important
that kids have time to do this."

In advanced classes, teachers often rush through tomes and require students to read
year-round. Over one Christmas break, Sachar had to read two hefty novels, "One
Hundred Years of Solitude" and "Midnight's Children." Summer had its mandatory
reading, too, and her father, author of the Newbery Medal-winning "Holes," said her
experience left him thinking that "sometimes the top schools confuse quantity with
quality."

In high-poverty areas, federal and state mandates constrain the use of literature, often
to only an excerpt in a commercial anthology, said Richard Allington, president of the
International Reading Association and professor at the University of Tennessee. When
teachers do use literary excerpts or whole books, they tend to "ask low-level
questions for which there is usually only one right answer," he said.

"Many teachers must select books that are on the 'approved' list of their school or
district, which means that books with content the administration or committee that
selects such books finds objectionable will be left out," said Esmeralda Santiago,
award-winning author of "When I Was Puerto Rican."

Allowing students to pick their own books is more than a democratic reading
experiment. Studies show that reading achievement is significantly improved when
students have an opportunity to choose from a selection of interesting texts rather
than being dictated to.

James Blasingame, an expert on children's literature who teaches at the University of
Arizona, said elementary and middle schools are doing a better job than high schools
incorporating the books that children like to read and giving them opportunities to
choose -- especially at high-performing schools.

At Todd Elementary School in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y., fifth-grade teacher Diane M.
Mallett routinely provides opportunities for her students to select books that excite
them, and her students say the freedom to choose pays off. Ricky Grassui, 11, said he
likes to read only "sort of" but admits to diving into books he can choose.

This year, Mallett added a new reading opportunity for her students: participating in
the country's largest annual Children's Choices book list, run jointly by the Children's
Book Council and the International Reading Association. Mallett's 21 students were
among the 10,000 children asked this year to read books published in 2004 and review
them for other children. (At the same time, teachers and older children also review
books for separate lists.)

The students said they loved the freedom to choose what they read. "It was really
fun," said Samantha Sternschein, 11. "We'd get a basket of books and got to pick out
what looked good to us. At the end of the book, you'd fill out a form asking, 'Did you
like the book and would you recommend it to anyone?' It made us want to read more."


http://www.detnews.com/2005/schools/0506/04/01-195795.htm


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