DCSIMG

Sponsored by Rapid Solicitors
Minister says young ‘should always be reading’

SCHOOLS Minister Nick Gibb said that children should “always have a book on the go” as he announced plans for a new national reading competition.

Youngsters who read for half an hour a day can be up to a year ahead in their schooling by age 15, Mr Gibb claimed yesterday.

He announced that from this autumn, the Government will be running a reading competition for seven to 12-year-olds in England, which aims to boost literacy standards and inspire youngsters to read.

It is understood that the competition will be based around who can read the most books, with youngsters encouraged to read fiction in particular.

There are expected to be local, regional and national prizes.

Mr Gibb said: “Children should always have a book on the go. The difference in achievement between children who read for half an hour a day in their spare time and those who do not is huge – as much as a year’s education by the time they are 15. A new national reading competition is designed to give a competitive spur to those reluctant readers who are missing out on the vast world of literature.”

The announcement comes just days after Claire Tomalin, acclaimed biographer of Charles Dickens, claimed that today’s youngsters do not have the attention span necessary to read one of his novels.

The Schools Minister warned that there are “shadows of Dickens’s world in our own” with disadvantaged youngsters the most likely to be affected.

In a speech at a south London secondary school yesterday he suggested that all pupils should have read at least one Dickens novel by the end of their teenage years and that teaching the expected standard in reading should be the “minimum expected”.

Speaking on the 200th anniversary of Dickens’s birth, Mr Gibb said that in the author’s time, “literacy was a gift for the few”.

“Today, almost everyone reads and writes. We blog, we tweet, report, comment, email and update to an astonishing extent. The chief executive of Google, Eric Schmidt, estimated we create as much information every two days on the internet as was produced in the entire history of mankind up until 2003.

“But even after two centuries of technological and social revolution, there are still shadows of Dickens’s world in our own – with literacy problems remaining asymmetric and heavily orientated towards the poorest in our communities.”


Logged in as:


Please adhere to our Community guidelines

Your view

Please to be able to comment on this story.

loading...
Find It

"Business owner? - Claim your business and Advertise with us"

In association with qype logo

Looking for...

Featured advertisers

Jobs

Search for a job

Motors

Search for a car

Property

Search for a house

Weather for Yorkshire

Saturday 26 May 2012

5 day forecast

Today

Sunny

Sunny

Temperature: 8 C to 21 C

Wind Speed: 17 mph

Wind direction: East

Tomorrow

Sunny

Sunny

Temperature: 9 C to 22 C

Wind Speed: 13 mph

Wind direction: East

Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.

Yorkshire Post provides news, events and sport features from the Yorkshire area. For the best up to date information relating to Yorkshire and the surrounding areas visit us at Yorkshire Post regularly or bookmark this page.