Part 6 – The Reading Crisis – Why children aren’t reading and what we can do about it

For Part 6 we asked all our interviewees for one thing they would do to address the reading crisis. Properly funded libraries and librarians were unsurprisingly a strong theme, but also a rethink about how we position children’s reading – how do we find the space for children to read and support children to experience the power and enjoyment of reading so they find their own routes into reading, and choose to do it. 

For this series we interviewed the following people (not all feature in every episode):

Dapo Adeola – Author and the illustrator of many books including Look Up!, Clean Up!and My Dad is a Grizzly Bear.

Sita Brahmachari – Author of many books including Artichoke Hearts, When Shadows Fall and Phoenix Brothers

Dr Darren Chetty – Lecturer at UCL Institute of Education and author, with Professor Karen Sands O’Connor, of Beyond the Secret Garden 

Professor Teresa Cremin – Professor of Education and Co-Director of the Literacy and Social Justice Centre at The Open University

Charlotte Hacking – Teacher Engagement Lead at the Helen Hamlyn Centre for Pedagogy and Research and Curriculum Lead at Herne Hill School 

Jenny Hawke – Children’s Librarian and Chair of the Youth Library Group

Tom Palmer – Author of many books including Angel of Grasmere, Resist and War Dog 

Glynn Palmer–Bell – Assistant Director of English at Castle View Enterprise Academy, Sunderland

Louie Stowell – Author of many books including the Loki series, Otherland and the Dragon in the Library

Sabrina Sulliman – English teacher at Southfields Academy, South West London

At the end of the series we will invite comments and ideas from listeners so look out for how you can contribute to the discussion.

Many thanks to everyone we interviewed and to our Co Producer Belinda Naylor.

Send us a message

Ali
0:11

I'm

Ali.

Katy
0:12

And

I'm

Katie.

Welcome

to

Mostly

Book

Talk.

This

is

part

six

of

our

series

about

the

reading

crisis,

why

children

aren't

reading

and

what

we

can

do

about

it.

Ali
0:22

So

at

the

end

of

all

of

our

interviews,

our

last

question

to

people

was:

if

you

could

implement

one

national

policy

or

initiative

to

address

the

reading

crisis,

what

would

it

be

and

why?

Katy
0:32

The

majority

of

our

interviewees

focused

on

libraries,

both

school

and

public

libraries.

They

emphasized

how

well-resourced

libraries

support

access

to

books,

provide

a

social

space

for

reading,

and

how

a

well-stocked

library

is

essential

to

successfully

supporting

readers

within

schools.

They

also

stressed

that

libraries

need

knowledgeable

librarians

if

they

are

to

be

truly

effective.

Tom

Palmer

sums

it

up

succinctly.

Tom Palmer
0:57

A

school

librarian

in

every

school.

Katy
0:59

Illustrator

Dapo

Adeola

is

also

very

clear

about

this

issue.

He

says

it's

simple.

Dapo Adeola
1:05

Open

more

libraries.

It's

just

that

simple.

It's

not

complicated.

Build

more

public

libraries,

open

more

public

libraries,

fund

them,

train

the

staff

well,

facilitate

them

so

that

they

can

be

more

than

just

a

place

that

kids

can

go

to

get

books.

Because

libraries

are

so

much

more

than

just

homes

for

books

that

people

can

borrow.

You

know,

so

that's

it.

It's

just

that

simple.

Like

just

open

more

libraries

or

reopen

the

ones

you

close.

It's

not

hard.

We

always

talk

about

how

there's

no

money,

there's

no

money.

But

there's

always

money

to

go

to

war,

there's

always

money

to

do

things

that

we

didn't

ask

for.

Open

more

libraries,

reopen

the

libraries,

and

stop

closing

libraries.

You

know,

as

much

as

we're

talking

about

this

concern

for

reading,

if

you

really

were

concerned,

you'd

stop

closing

the

place

that

people

can

go

to

to

get

books

for

free.

You

really

would

stop

doing

that.

Ali
1:51

And

Jenny

Hawke,

Chair

of

the

Youth

Libraries

Group,

agrees.

Jenny Hawke
1:55

It

would

have

to

be,

I

think,

definitely

properly

funded

school

and

public

libraries

because

everything

sort

of

spirals

from

that,

really.

And

it

needs

to

be

every

area

of

the

country

as

well

to

have

that.

And

obviously,

we

all

welcome

the

news

about

a

school

library

in

every

primary,

but

it

needs

to

be

properly

managed

and

organized,

and

to

have

a

trained

member

of

staff.

So,

yeah,

I

think

I

would

just

have

to

go

with

that

because

I'm

sure,

well,

we

know

from

evidence

that

that

really

does

definitely

reignite

that

passion

for

reading

in

children.

Katy
2:46

Teacher

Glynn

Palmer

Bell

focuses

on

every

school

having

a

library

and

a

librarian.

Glynn

also

notes

the

value

of

a

school's

library

service,

which

he's

lucky

enough

to

still

have

in

Northumberland.

These

used

to

exist

across

the

country

and

support

schools

across

an

area

with

bookstock

and

advice,

but

they

now

only

operate

in

a

few

areas.

Glynn Palmer Bell
3:02

Every

school

to

have

a

library

and

a

dedicated

librarian.

I

know

that's

been

the

pledge

to

move

into

primary

schools,

and

I

understand

because

that's

where

the

drop

of

reading

of

pleasure

exists

at

the

upper

part

of

primary

schools,

but

it

does

continue

into

teenage

years.

And

the

one

thing

that

I

can

see

has

made

the

biggest

impact

is

a

fully

stock

library

with

a

dedicated

librarian.

My

worry

is

that

if

we

don't

have

a

dedicated

member

staff

with

the

expertise

and

the

time

and

the

brain

space

to

be

able

to

put

the

collection

together

and

it's

just

given

to

somebody

else

as

an

additional

responsibility,

then

it

won't

be

successful.

And

I'm

not

too

sure

about

the

national

picture,

but

the

school

library

services

have

depleted

and

have

gone

just

as

fast

as

community

libraries.

So

the

resurrection

of

libraries

and

the

resurrection

of

school

library

services,

we

lean

very

heavily

on

our

school

library

service.

And

it's

Northumberland's

and

it's

phenomenal.

They

do

an

amazing

job.

And

when

we

have

members

of

staff

asking

for

particular

books,

or

when

these

students

are

asking

for

a

collection

of

books,

we

have

the

ability

to

be

able

to

switch

out

books

that

we

know

are

popular

or

being

borrowed

that

we

were

hoping

to

because

the

students

are

in

charge

of

the

collection,

the

students

control

the

collection.

But

we

need

to

be

able

to

be

in

a

position

where

we

can

do

that.

My

worry

also

around

the

implementing

national

policy

is

non-fiction

and

how

non-fiction

is

being

consumed

and

how

non-fiction

books

can

go

out

of

date

so

easily

and

so

quickly.

When

we

think

about

what

reading

for

pleasure

means

for

students,

some

students

it's

about

non-fiction

as

well

as

fiction,

and

we

absolutely

prioritize

fiction.

There's

amazing

books

out

there,

but

the

non-fiction

books

are

also

going

to

win

over

certain

students.

And

if

we're

not

updating

them

regularly,

and

they

can

be

quite

expensive,

then

they

get

we

could

be

missing

a

strict

there.

So

I

think

those

school

library

services

can

really

bug

the

holes

and

make

sure

that

we're

getting

the

right

books

in

the

right

places.

Ali
4:56

We

hear

next

from

author

Louie

Stowell,

who

also

highlights

libraries,

and

that

we

might

want

to

look

to

Ireland

to

see

where

they're

succeeding.

Louie Stowell
5:03

Well,

I

think

the

base

level

policy

would

be

raise

taxes.

But

what

I

would

spend

that

tax

money

on

if

it

was

just

focused

on

reading

would

be

libraries.

And

it

would

be

ensuring

every

library

has

trained

librarians

and

that

it

has

new

stock.

And

also

that

it's

a

comfortable

space

to

be,

which

a

lot

of

libraries

are,

but

because

libraries

are

those

spaces

you

can

go

to

for

free,

it's

making

sure

it's

welcoming.

I

just

think

it's

one

of

those

key

factors

in

discovery

and

in

creating

spaces

to

read

and

social

spaces

to

read.

Because

obviously

you

get

all

those

like

story

times

and

stuff

at

libraries,

you

get

comics

clubs,

but

I

think

that's

just

down

to

having

the

money

to

do

that.

I

don't

think

there's

a

library

out

there

with

loads

of

money

that's

not

doing

that.

So

yeah,

I

think

funding

libraries

is

is

a

real

key

thing

because

a

lot

of

the

other

things

are

perhaps

things

that

businesses

could

do,

but

that

government

can't,

you

know.

But

I

think

government

should

just

fund

libraries.

I

guess

one

cheery

vision

is

Ireland.

And

I

I

feel

like

Ireland

would

not

agree

because

Ireland

would

be

like,

we've

got

reading

problems

too,

but

they

only

really

seem

to

develop

reading

problems

in

teenage

years,

and

actually,

children's

reading.

I

think

they

had

some

recent

stats

where

it's

like

90%

of

eight-year-olds

enjoy

reading

in

Ireland.

And

I

think

obviously

some

of

that

is

just

cultural

in

a

way

that

we

can't

replicate,

but

I

think

they

do

have

a

social

attitude

to

reading

and

a

social

attitude

to

stories.

So

whatever

we

can

copy,

please

do.

Katy
6:25

Professor

Teresa

Cremin

thought

that

choosing

one

measure

was

an

impossible

task

and

identifies

the

need

for

a

more

systemic

approach.

Teresa Cremin
6:32

It's

just

the

hardest

question

when

I

read

them

before.

I

thought

I

was

going

to

tell

you,

I

don't

have

one.

I

don't

think

there

is

one.

I

don't

think

there

is

one

that's

a

panacea.

But

I

suppose

I

would

really

value

all

head

teachers,

CEOs

of

trusts,

head

teachers

in

primary,

and

senior

leadership

teams

across

the

country

to

understand

the

power

and

potential

of

choosing

to

read

in

your

own

time

regularly,

the

books

and

the

subject

matters

that

you're

interested

in.

If

they

can

understand

the

power

of

volitional

reading,

they

might

pay

more

serious

attention

to

the

agenda

and

give

reading

for

pleasure

the

respect

it

deserves.

It

isn't

a

panacea,

but

it

can

make

a

very

significant

contribution

both

to

the

academic

growth,

but

also

the

social

and

emotional

well-being

of

our

young

people.

And

given

we

have

the

unhappiest

children,

according

to

the

childhood

survey,

in

Europe,

the

unhappiest

teenagers

across

Europe,

which

is

not

a

badge

that

sits

lightly

on

mine

or

anyone

else's

shoulders,

then

we

need

to

be

doing

something

serious

about

it

and

recognizing

that

reading

for

position

isn't

just

on

the

edge,

an

extra,

a

nice

to

have,

but

should

be

the

backbone

of

the

way

we

are

working

in

the

school

in

order

to

foster

that

additional

reading

journey.

Ali
7:45

Teacher

and

researcher

Charlotte

Hacking

identifies

space

in

the

curriculum

and

stronger

subject

knowledge

so

that

teachers

can

help

students

find

their

own

route

into

reading.

Charlotte Hacking
7:55

I

think

the

one

thing

would

be

how

do

you

bring

the

meaning

of

reading

back

into

the

curriculum?

And

you

do

that

through

the

enjoyable

reading

experience

and

the

teachers

that

have

the

subject

knowledge

and

the

autonomy

to

do

it.

I

don't

think

you

can

come

away

from

the

fact

that

schools

are

in

a

book

crisis.

We

need

much

more

access

to

text

to

be

able

to

do

that.

We

need

loads

of

subject

knowledge

in

going

into

schools

around

the

phonics.

We've

had

loads

of

phonics.

We

now

need

more

around

that.

What

are

the

other

routes

into

reading

and

how

do

we

foster

those

lifelong

readers?

I

think

the

year

of

reading

is

a

really

good

way

into

that,

but

how

do

we

make

it

broader

than

that

as

well?

Because

you

don't

want

it

to

just

be

a

year

of

reading,

you

want

a

lifetime

of

reading

for

children,

and

how

do

you

do

that

really

authentically?

Katy
8:39

Teacher

Sabrina

Sulliman

agrees

and

talks

about

dedicated

time

in

the

curriculum.

If

we

don't

allow

space

for

reading

and

only

make

it

an

afterthought,

then

it

isn't

seen

as

important

or

a

valuable

way

to

spend

time.

Sabrina Sulliman
8:51

Essentially,

what

we

try

and

build

into

our

school

is

not

something

that

is

built

in,

which

is

opportunity

to

read

where

you

don't

feel

like

it's

for

a

purpose

other

than

your

own

enjoyment.

And

to

do

that

in

a

school

where

every

hour

is

planned

curriculum

time,

then

they

have

their

own

enrichment

activities

or

after

school

clubs

they

want

to

go

to.

You

have

to

work

really

carefully

to

build

in

these

opportunities

to

read

for

pleasure.

And

unfortunately,

they

all

become

times

like

oh,

we've

got

20

minutes

in

the

library

today,

or

we

can

go

down

for

an

hour

every

two

weeks

on

a

rotation.

It's

important

for

us

to

build

those

opportunities

in.

But

if

I

could

put

one

initiative

in

place,

it

would

be

to

mandate

that,

to

understand

that

if

you're

going

to

ask

children

to

do

something

for

pleasure,

then

that

time

has

to

exist

somewhere

within

the

day,

then

it

might

become

habitual,

then

they

might

do

it

outside

of

the

school

day.

But

at

the

moment,

it

feels

like

we're

stealing

opportunities,

getting

in

10

minutes

here,

20

minutes

there

where

we

can.

You

can

see

a

kid

getting

really

into

a

book,

you're

like,

right,

that's

it,

the

time's

up,

date

title

name,

we've

got

to

start

with

our

like

learning

thing.

If

there's

no

space

for

it

within

the

school

day,

but

there's

a

space

for

loads

and

loads

of

testing.

The

message

it

sends

to

the

children

is

even

when

you

are

reading

in

school,

it

is

all

to

prep

you

for

that

test.

It's

all

to

make

you

a

stronger

reader

for

that

test.

So

there

is

still

ways

to

capture

whether

children

are

able

to

read,

but

the

opportunity

to

do

so

can't

be

so

closely

aligned

to

this

idea

of

testing,

and

it

can't

be

stolen

opportunities

within

curriculum

time.

It

should

be

included.

I

think

primary

schools

do

it

beautifully,

that

going

to

the

library

and

having

reading

corners

is

natural.

And

when

you

come

to

secondary

schools

and

you

don't

have

those

opportunities

built

into

your

day,

it

doesn't

feel

natural

anymore.

And

so

I

think

a

part

of

them

feel

like

we're

growing

up

now,

we

don't

do

that

anymore.

And

that's

really

dangerous.

And

therefore

it's

unsurprising.

I

think

it

was

it,

28%

of

children

in

2023

said

they

enjoyed

reading

for

pleasure.

I

wonder

how

many

of

those

children

have

opportunity

within

their

day-to-day,

within

their

home

lives,

to

just

sit

and

read

a

book

without

thinking

about

anything

other

than

just

reading

my

book.

So

I

suppose

I'd

mandate

that

compulsory

reading

for

pleasure

time.

Ali
11:03

Dr.

Darren

Chetty

has

a

specific

idea

around

how

children's

literature

is

understood

and

would

like

to

create

a

space

for

critical

thinking

and

discussion

rather

than

just

book

reviews.

Darren Chetty
11:12

I've

been

trying

to

get

a

magazine

off

the

ground

because

I

think

that

children's

literature

in

this

country

does

not

have

a

culture

of

criticism.

I've

come

from

doing

work

around

hip-hop

and

hip-hop

education,

and

almost

from

its

inception,

there

were

journalists

writing

critically

about

hip-hop,

and

you

know,

there's

sometimes

the

artists

didn't

like

it.

But

ultimately,

the

art

form

benefited

from

that

kind

of

engagement.

Something

about

children's

literature

being

seen

as

just

for

kids

means

that

the

broadsheets

largely

did

away

with

their

children's

sections.

There's

very

little,

and

again

it

gets

privatized,

it

then

becomes

influencers

who

are

getting

money

from

publishers

who

were

telling

us

about

stuff.

But

we

don't

have

thinking

seriously

about

children's

books

in

the

public

sphere.

The

TLS,

the

London

Review

of

Books,

they

very

rarely

cover

children's

literature.

When

they

do,

there's

very

few

people

who

would

get

a

word

in

in

that

conversation.

I'd

probably

go

with

the

children's

magazine,

just

because

I

honestly

think

that

it

won't

have

the

immediate

effect.

It

won't

be

something

children

would

read,

but

it

would

finally

treat

children's

literature

as

an

art

form

and

by

implication

take

children

more

seriously.

At

the

moment,

what

we

have

is

academic

writing

in

journals,

which

again,

the

way

academic

writing

is

set

up

is

not

to

be

particularly

readable

or

or

compelling.

So

we

have

this

strange

situation

where

the

creators

of

children's

literature

probably

don't

read

that.

The

criticism

is

so

far

removed

from

the

art

form.

And

instead,

a

lot

of

the

the

sort

of

really

difficult

conversations

around

how

we're

positioning

children,

what

we

owe

them,

what

are

our

moral

responsibilities

to

them,

the

extent

to

which

hope

needs

to

be

within

children's

literature.

Those

aren't

happening

in

in

form

public

spaces,

they're

happening

in

publishing

houses,

often

with

individual

authors

having

to

make

a

case

to

the

people

in

their

publishing

house

who

are

largely

in

a

business,

you

know.

It's

it's

a

creative

business,

it's

an

interesting

business,

but

it

is

a

business.

And

I

do

think

that

the

art

form

is

diminished

for

that,

and

that

children,

by

implication

and

by

extension,

are

also

diminished

for

that.

So

certainly,

you

know,

secondary

school

students,

because

that

access

is

well,

I'm

not

for

excluding

children

from

this

conversation,

but

what

I'm

saying

is

often

it's

been

the

business

directly

in

conversation

with

children

and

excluding

anyone

else

who

might

think

about

it

from

the

point

of

view

of

education,

literature,

art,

ethics,

and

all

of

those

are

dimensions

of

children's

literature

and

ones

we

should

take

more

seriously,

I

think.

I

mean,

books

for

keeps

are

fantastic

and

are

you

know

one

of

the

best

things

out

there,

but

they

are

primarily

about

helping

adults

know

what's

out

there

and

they're

gonna

be

positive.

And

if

you

only

have

three

sentences

to

say

to

someone,

you

probably

should

make

them

positive.

But

if

you

have

more

space

to

think

about

nuance,

then

perhaps

you

can

bring

in

things

that

aren't

completely

positive

but

aren't

designed

to

take

them

down

so

much

as

oriented

it

towards

an

improved

art

form.

I

think

that's

what

good

criticism

does.

You

know,

film

criticism,

sight

and

sound.

I

grew

up

reading

that

and

loving

how

it

helped

me

appreciate

film

more.

And

I

think

you

could

do

the

same

with

children's

literature,

and

it's

way

beyond

time

that

we

had

such

a

thing

in

this

country.

Katy
14:26

So

there

were

some

really

clear

messages

there

in

terms

of

what

one

thing

people

would

do,

and

also

all

of

the

interviews

that

we've

had.

So,

Ali,

what

do

we

think

the

thing

is

that

stands

out

most?

Ali
14:37

I

think

it's

lack

of

time

in

the

curriculum

for

reading,

it's

just

not

seen

as

important

enough,

you

know.

Katy
14:42

Yeah,

just

reading

into

your

interests,

so

whether

you

call

it

reading

for

pleasure

or

reading

for

purpose

or

whatever,

the

pure

joy

of

getting

lost

in

a

book

or

sharing

books

or

laughing

about

books,

talking

about

books,

finding

something

that

you're

interested

in

in

a

book,

there's

just

no

time

for

it.

Ali
14:57

I

mean,

at

primary

it's

not

so

bad,

is

it?

Because

it's

often

done

quite

well.

There's

story

time

and

whole

class

reading.

Katy
15:04

Yeah,

but

the

extent

seems

to

vary

massively

from

school

to

school.

I

mean,

some

people

find

time

for

it

every

day,

and

it's

absolutely

non-negotiable.

And

in

some

places

it

just

gets

squeezed

out

really

easily.

Ali
15:17

Yeah,

for

other

things

that

come

and

go.

But

it's

secondary,

it

totally

stops.

I

mean,

there

are

obviously

exceptions,

but

in

our

experience

it

stops,

and

kids

might

be

encouraged

to

have

a

book

in

their

back.

Katy
15:27

No,

the

same

book

that

they

carry

around,

like

a

book

brand

new

autumn.

Yeah.

But

that

but

they

never

get

any

real

space

to

read

it,

or

nobody's

taken

the

time

with

them

to

choose

that

book

or

to

recommend

them

new

books

which

they

might

be

interested

in.

Ali
15:41

Yeah,

and

also

it's

interesting,

isn't

it,

from

the

people

we

talk

to,

it's

always

assessed

and

tested.

I

mean,

children

associate

reading

with

English

lessons

or

being

tested.

Katy
15:52

Yeah,

I

mean,

they

get

that

message

from

the

very

start,

don't

they?

It's

like

you're

going

to

be

assessed

as

to

what

colour

book

you're

on,

and

you

go

through

that

process.

Ali
16:01

And

at

the

end

of

the

reading

schemes

and

things,

there's

again

a

test

in

order

to

move

to

the

next

stage,

isn't

there?

Katy
16:08

And

then

that

just

gets

built

on

by

each

key

stage

assessment

and

the

pressure

that

intentionally

or

unintentionally

gets

put

on

children

in

terms

of

those

assessments

and

the

way

in

which

they're

taught

reading

to

do

well

in

those

assessments.

There's

that

sense

that

it's

something

to

be

conquered.

And

that's

fine.

I

mean,

I

I

think

it's

difficult.

I

I

don't

want

to

get

into

the

phonics

are

a

bad

thing.

I

think

for

most

children,

and

we

know

it

doesn't

work

for

all

children,

but

for

most

children,

it's

a

good

structured

way

to

learn

to

read.

But

I

think

what

what

our

interviewees

were

saying

is

that

that's

fine

as

far

as

it

goes.

But

alongside

that,

you

need

to

be

being

clear

that

reading

is

about

so

much

more

than

that.

It's

about

real

books,

it's

about

real

stories,

it's

about

engaging

with

them

and

talking

about

them.

And

yes,

learning

your

letters

and

sounds

and

working

your

way

through

your

functional

skills

as

a

reader

is

really

important,

but

there's

more

to

it.

Ali
17:02

Yeah,

and

if

we

want

to

make

reading

a

valuable

thing

in

its

own

right

and

not

just

for

testing

them,

we've

got

to

change

that

emphasis

or

swing

that's

gone

so

far

into

the

functional

sides

of

reading.

I

mean,

our

kids

can

read.

I

think

we

did

quite

well

in

those

tests

for

reading.

It's

just

that

they're

not

choosing

to

read

for

fun

or

for

interest

or

just

chat

about

books.

Katy
17:24

And

so

then

their

level

as

a

reader,

however

much

they

may

have

the

functional

skill

of

being

able

to

read,

they

never

properly

become

really,

really

fluent

readers

because

you

don't

unless

you

practice

it.

And

so

that

limits

them

in

that

respect,

just

if

we're

just

going

down

the

skills

route.

But

it

just

also

limits

them

in

terms

of

well,

what

that

great

rich

knowledge

that

they

can

gain

and

experience

and

all

of

the

benefits

in

terms

of

well-being

and

everything

else

that

we

were

talking

about,

it

just

limits

that

and

it

cuts

out

that

access

to

it.

But

you

do

understand

that

if

that's

all

they

see

is

that

they're

reading

to

tick

a

box,

why

would

they

choose

to

do

it?

Ali
17:59

Yeah,

kids

know

that

they're

doing

this

to

in

order

to

pass

this

test

in

this

particular

way.

And

you

know,

the

news

about

another

test

at

year

eight

for

reading

isn't

going

to

make

more

children

read.

It's

not.

So,

in

our

opinion,

schools

need

to

give

space

to

reading

for

pleasure

as

well

as

reading

for

learning

and

framing

it

as

something

that's

good

for

you,

or

this

will

help

your

vegetables.

Yeah,

you

need

vegetables.

This

will

help

you

with

your

academic

achievement.

Katy
18:25

Yeah.

Ali
18:26

Not

likely

to

engage

young

people

in

reading

for

pleasure.

It

comes

through

them

making

it

a

social

activity,

creating

conversations

about

books,

time.

You

know,

just

time

in

the

library

to

kind

of

just

go

and

have

a

look,

what

there

is.

Katy
18:38

And

you

might

and

also

just

what

are

their

interests?

How

does

it

connect

with

their

interests?

Does

it

connect

with

films

that

they've

seen

or

games

that

they're

playing

if

they're

gamers,

other

sports,

other

activities

that

they're

enjoying,

there

may

well

be

links

across.

There

doesn't

have

to

be.

They

could

read

about

something

completely

different

because

they

spend

how

many

hours

playing

football,

they

might

not

want

to

read

about

it,

but

they

might

do.

But

it's

just

like

those

kinds

of

connections

and

discussions,

you

know,

it's

what

we

do

as

adult

readers,

we

find

things

that

interest

us.

Ali
19:06

Yeah,

exactly.

Who

knows?

But

without

the

space

and

the

time

to

even

just

get

lost

in

the

library

for

a

bit

of

time,

just

look

at

the

shelves

and

go,

Oh,

this

blue

book

looks

like

that.

Katy
19:16

Yeah,

and

also

picking

up

books

and

starting

reading

them

and

thinking

actually

this

just

does

not

interest

me,

and

being

able

to

put

it

down

again

and

choose

a

different

one.

It's

all

of

those

things

that

you

have

to

do

in

terms

of

becoming

a

reader

and

getting

a

sense

of

what

being

a

reader

is.

Ali
19:30

And

in

order

for

that

to

happen

in

a

cohesive

way,

you

need

adults

that

know

about

books.

So

if

a

kid

picks

up

a

book

that

they

like

that's

about

this,

then

you

need

an

adult

that

can

say,

Oh,

you

enjoyed

that

book,

that's

great.

Why

don't

you

try

this?

Katy
19:43

But

there's

no

real

coverage,

I

mean,

more

in

primary

teacher

education

than

secondary,

but

in

terms

of

modern

children's

literature,

having

a

really

strong

knowledge

of

that.

And

also

that

needs

to

be

kept

up

to

date

because

obviously

new

books

coming

out

all

the

time.

So

it

needs

to

be

part

of

ongoing

professional

development,

which

I

think

very

few

schools

include

an

update

on

new

children's

books

as

part

of

their

professional

development,

which

means

that

they're

not

in

a

position

to

make

those

connections

for

young

people

and

to

make

those

recommendations.

And

obviously,

there

are

individual

teachers

who

have

taken

a

real

interest

and

some

schools

that

do

it

really

well,

but

I

think

on

the

whole,

we

still

find

that

schools

are

recommending

books

which

they

read

as

children,

which

they

would

probably

recommend

teachers

who,

you

know,

I

mean,

we

we

quite

often

find

reading

lessons

schools

that

have

books

on

that

we

read

at

school.

Yeah.

And

we

are

quite

old.

Ali
20:38

We

are

very

old.

And

I

think

also

for

it

not

just

to

be

left

in

the

English

department's

remit

that

if

you're

a

geography

teacher

and

you've

read

an

interesting

book

that

might

be

about

geography

or

might

not

be,

then

it's

also

your

responsibility,

not

just

the

librarian

or

the

English

team's

responsibility.

We

read

books

about

everything,

and

we

need

reading

in

so

many

different

ways.

And

there's

a

a

teacher

we

know

that

does

a

science

book

club,

and

that

those

sorts

of

things

are

brilliant.

So

anything

that

might

play

to

an

interest

is

really

important,

but

you

need

to

have

space

and

you

need

to

have

knowledge

about

what

books

exist.

I

think

a

couple

of

the

teachers,

Sabrina

Sullivan

and

Glenn

Palmer

Bell,

talked

about

everyone

in

the

school

being

reading

model.

Katy
21:20

Yeah.

And

you

need

the

books.

And

you

need

the

books.

But

it

also

plays

into

Darren's

point

as

well

about

that

lack

of

a

critical

discussion

about

children's

books.

And

so

that

means

any

discussion

of

them

is

in

the

academic

journals,

which

mainly

for

academics,

or

it's

review-level

recommendations,

which

isn't

a

sort

of

broader

look

at

the

role

that

children's

literature

has,

or

a

kind

of

critical

analysis

of

the

genre

or

what's

happening

in

children's

books.

That's

that

middle

ground

that

you've

got

in

adults'

literature,

the

kind

of

times

literature

supplement

stuff,

but

just

a

more

in

depth

consideration

of

what

is

being

achieved

through

children's

literature,

because

children's

literature.

Is

that

strange

literature

that's

written

by

adults

for

children?

Ali
22:04

It's

commissioned

by

adults,

written

by

adults,

published

by

adults,

bought

by

adults.

Katy
22:09

For

children.

But

it

is

for

children.

And

so

there

are

adults

exercising

choices

at

every

stage

of

that

process.

And

so

interrogating

that

in

terms

of

what

children

actually

end

up

with

is

quite

a

valuable

thing

to

do,

I

think.

Ali
22:24

Yeah,

and

finally,

as

we've

said,

they

need

access

to

books.

We've

talked

about

libraries,

but

a

lot

of

children

don't

own

any

books

or

have

them

at

home.

Katy
22:31

That

came

through

really

strongly

was

just

that

awareness

of

how

much

the

cost

of

living

crisis

and

poverty

and

just

absolutely

that

issue

of

access,

that

so

many

children

will

not

own

any

books

or

have

them

in

their

home.

And

that

comes

back

to

libraries

as

being

that

great

equalizer

in

terms

of

access

to

books.

And

the

point

that

so

many

people

made

that

pupils

in

deprived

areas

are

less

likely

to

own

their

own

books.

And

they

are

also

less

likely

to

have

public

libraries

and

they're

less

likely

to

have

a

quality

bookshop.

It's

going

to

be

books

in

the

supermarket.

And

even

if

money

were

available

for

their

families

to

spend

on

books,

you're

buying

books

mainly

in

supermarkets,

and

that

is

a

very

narrow

selection.

It's

easy

to

share

dappo

in

everyone

else's

frustration.

Ali
23:18

There's

been

a

massive

disinvestment

in

libraries.

And

that

is

the

one

place

where

you

can

access

books,

regardless

of

your

income

and

circumstances.

And

you

can

sit

and

read

a

book.

I

mean,

not

everyone

has

space,

a

quiet

place

to

read

a

book.

Katy
23:32

Yeah.

And

that

is

why

libraries

are

just

so

important.

And

we've

done

all

this

disinvestment,

and

then

we

act

surprised

that

children

and

families

aren't

accessing

books

and

reading.

And

you're

just

gonna

think,

well,

well,

really?

And

guess

what?

It's

the

one

place.

Ali
23:47

One

place.

I

mean,

obviously,

there's

some

real

positives

around

the

National

Year

of

Reading.

Commitments

to

fund

primary

school

libraries

and

some

funding

for

books

in

secondary

schools.

Katy
23:55

Although

Yeah,

but

it's

not

clear

whether

that

funding

for

secondaries

is

ring-fenced.

I

mean,

we've

had

librarians

say

that

that

their

schools

are

quite

clear

it's

not.

Ali
24:03

That

that

money's

coming

in,

but

it's

gone

elsewhere.

Yeah.

But

then

that

but

that's

just,

you

know,

for

this

year,

there's

no

real

long-term

plan

to

keep

a

refresh

bookstore

or

fund

the

librarians

who

bring

the

real

value

to

having

the

libraries

in

the

first

place.

Katy
24:16

Yeah,

so

we

end

up

with

rooms

full

of

books

that

aren't

updated.

They

are

not

easily

discoverable

by

readers

because

there

isn't

someone

who

actually

knows

them

and

can

make

those

connections

for

readers

running

it.

Ali
24:28

Well,

there's

just

a

library

full

of

books

published

in

2000

and

whatever

year

we're

in.

So

access,

as

we

say,

means

not

just

access

to

any

old

books,

it's

a

wide

range

of

books

so

that

children

and

young

people

can

choose.

Key

motivator

for

reading.

I

know,

and

that's

the

challenge,

isn't

it,

for

schools

and

librarians,

but

also

for

publishers

and

for

everyone

in

the

sector.

Yeah.

There's

a

long

way

to

go

before

we're

offering

young

people

stories

that

act

as

windows,

mirrors,

and

doors

for

them.

Katy
25:06

Yeah,

yeah.

And

we've

had

some

progress

in

terms

of

diversity

of

children's

books

and

being

more

representative,

but

that

ebbs

and

flows

and

it's

not

in

a

great

place

at

the

moment.

Maybe

it

will

move

forward

again.

But

it

it

requires

that

debate

and

discussion

and

the

constant

challenging

of

how

are

we

serving

young

people

with

the

literature

that

we

offer

them.

Ali
25:26

So

lots

to

do.

And

obviously,

what

we

haven't

addressed

is

the

massive

elephant

in

the

room,

which

is

technology.

Katy
25:34

Yeah.

A

lot

of

people

touched

on

it,

didn't

they?

How

phones

are

an

issue.

Ali
25:40

They

literally

suck

your

time

away.

Katy
25:44

I

think

it

comes

back

to

the

modelling,

doesn't

it?

It's

that

if

we

want

children

and

young

people

to

read,

then

we

need

to

be

reading

ourselves.

And

if

we're

sitting

scrolling

on

our

phones

and

they're

sitting

scrolling

on

their

phones,

then

that

time

is

disappearing.

Ali
25:57

Yeah,

no

reading

is

getting

done.

I

mean,

it's

a

difficult

one,

isn't

it?

Because

it's

the

sum-up

of

all

screen

time.

Because

obviously

at

school

they're

on

screens

for

some

work

that

they're

doing,

and

then

at

home

they're

on

screens

for

homework

or

whatever.

And

if

you're

dyslexic,

then

you

might

need

to

read

on

a

screen

because

then

the

Kindle

helps

you

read.

But

I

think

it's

about

having

some

space

where

all

of

us

put

the

phone

down

and

block

the

apps

or

make

sure

you

can't

access

them

for

an

hour

or

something.

Katy
26:28

I

think

it's

what

Teresa

mentioned,

which

was

around

sustained

engagement

and

attention,

and

that

that's

what

we

should

be

worried

about

losing.

That

we've

got

so

used

to

this

sort

of

30-second,

one-minute

little

videos

and

reels,

and

that's

as

long

as

our

attention

span

goes.

And

that

that

isn't

as

sustaining.

You

don't

get

the

same

thing

out

of

it

as

you

do

really

immersing

yourselves

in

a

longer

sustained

narrative,

whether

that's

fiction

or

non-fiction.

I

do

sometimes

think

you

know

that

feeling

when

you're

reading

and

you

forget

and

you

lose

the

sense

of

time.

That's

sometimes

what

happens

when

you're

zoom

scrolling

on

social

media,

but

you

come

out

of

it

just

feeling

slightly

befuddled.

Whereas

when

you've

been

reading

and

you

come

out

of

it,

it's

a

very

different

feeling

in

terms

of

having

been

immersed

in

that

world.

Ali
27:19

Yeah,

but

the

benefits

that

there

are.

It's

reading

for

its

own

sake,

not

reading

because

you

need

to

read

in

order

to

do

X,

Y,

and

Z.

It's

how

do

you

get

back

that

reading,

as

you

said,

for

escapism

or

reading

just

to

read,

because

reading

itself

just

takes

you

out

of

your

current

situation.

Or

what

I

reread

when

I'm

feeling

like

I

don't

know

what

to

read,

then

I'll

reread

some

Jane

Austen.

Because

in

that

world

the

rules

are

quite

clear,

and

you

know,

because

it's

a

comfort

read,

because

you

know

what's

going

to

happen,

you

know

that

eventually

Lizzie

will

marry

Mr.

Darcy.

Sorry,

spoiler

alert.

And

having

those

reads

that

you

go

back

to

that

are

for

whatever

reason

are

really

kind

of

important

to

have

in

your

world,

I

think.

Katy
28:05

Yeah,

it's

getting

children

and

young

people

to

the

point

that

they

have

had

that

experience

of

what

it

is

like

to

have

been

totally

lost

in

a

book

and

or

a

series.

And

then

once

you've

done

that,

you

know

that

feeling,

and

then

you

have

a

kind

of

reference

point

in

to

why

you

want

to

go

back

to

reading

and

why

that

might

be

more

sustaining

and

relaxing

and

enjoyable

than

scrolling

through

whatever

cat

videos

or

whatever

else

you

get.

I

get

cat

videos,

you

get

dog

videos.

Whatever

little

corner

of

the

internet

is

being

served

up

to

you.

It's

mostly

a

bit

dull.

So

that's

some

of

the

things

which

we've

taken

away

from

this

discussion,

which

we

found

really

interesting.

And

thank

you

to

everyone

who

took

part.

We

know

it

wasn't

a

comprehensive

look.

We

know,

for

example,

that

we

concentrated

on

secondary

teachers,

and

there

may

be

some

primary

teachers

who

want

to

take

part

in

that

conversation.

Other

people

think

that

there

are

things

that

we've

missed

or

things

that

you

want

to

add

to

it.

And

we

really

encourage

you

to

do

that.

Send

us

an

email

at

info

at

mostlybooktalk.com.

You

can

send

that

as

an

email

that

we

can

read

out,

or

you

can

send

us

a

voice

note

or

a

little

recording

that

we

can

play

if

you

want

to

add

a

contribution.

Ali
29:24

It's

obviously

an

ongoing

conversation

for

not

just

the

National

Year

of

Reading

but

beyond.

One

that

I

think

we're

going

to

return

to

because

there's

a

lot

to

say

about

it

and

there's

a

lot

of

work

still

to

be

done.

Katy
29:36

Yeah,

there

is

a

real

sense

that

the

National

Year

of

Reading

can't

just

be

this

year.

It's

got

to

be

the

start

of

something

rather

than

just

something

that

starts

and

finishes

within

the

year.

If

it's

going

to

be

meaningful,

it

has

to

be

the

beginning

of

that

discussion,

a

beginning

of

thinking

about

some

of

these

things

differently.

Ali
29:51

Yeah.

And

we'll

put

another

issue

out

when

we

gather

what

people

want

to

say.

Our

last

word

goes

back

to

something

that

author

Sita

Brahmachari

said

that

places

reading

at

the

center

of

what

young

people

need

to

thrive.

Sita Brahmachari
30:05

The

scale

that

we

need

needs

to

be

that

all

of

the

amazing

educators,

the

librarians,

all

of

the

amazing

people

in

the

book

agencies

that

I

know,

we

need

to

come

together

and

in

unity,

and

we

need

to

say,

right,

this

needs

to

change,

which

means

I

need

to

have

this

vision

of

stimulating

the

whole

of

the

creative

child,

making

sure

that

they

and

their

families,

their

guardians

have

the

opportunity

to

thrive.

I

mean,

I

call

it

reading

to

thrive.

It's

not

just

to

survive,

it's

not

just

to

pass

the

test,

it's

to

thrive.

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