Time for some book blether
In a special feature, Teresa Cremin, Professor of Education (Literacy), The Open University advises on ways to develop knowledge of children’s literature and other texts
Some teachers are avid readers of literature and other texts for the young; the readers of this magazine probably devour books for breakfast.
However the OU/UK Literacy Association research
suggests that many practitioners are less hooked, less knowledgeable and rather over-reliant on celebrity authors and their childhood favourites.1
Whilst this Teachers as Readers survey of practitioners’
subject knowledge of children’s texts was undertaken in 2008 (in 11 local authorities), the percentages remain shocking. For example 54% of the 1200 teachers couldn’t name six children’s authors, 24% were unable to name one picture fiction creator and 22% couldn’t name a single poet. Carol Ann Duffy received only one mention, in contrast to Roald Dahl who was in a league of his own. In 2015, the National Literacy Trust survey of 2300 teachers asked the same question, with reference just to authors.2
This revealed that the profession remains
Dahl dependent; he was the most frequently named ‘good’ children’s author in both surveys (good referred to writers whose work teachers valued and found successful in class). This was despite the fact that the OU/UKLA survey was completed by primary teachers and the NLT one by predominantly secondary practitioners. Professionally this lack of subject knowledge raises cause for
concern. It led to a research project Teachers as Readers Phase II which showed that developing teachers’ knowledge of potent literature can make a marked difference to practice, serving to enrich reading for pleasure pedagogy and support the creation of reciprocal and interactive communities of readers.3
Nonetheless it remains a
genuine challenge for classroom teachers to find the time and energy to expand their repertoires. The culture of accountability in England largely conceives of reading as a matter of proficiency, an individual activity which can be taught and tested, and the prime focus for many schools remains decoding and comprehension. This can and often does sideline children’s pleasure in reading, and despite the policy rhetoric and its inclusion in the National Curriculum (DfE, 20134
), there is no requirement for teachers to develop this essential
aspect of their subject knowledge in teacher training or through continuing professional development (CPD).
Teresa Cremin
Pleasure Award in collaboration with the OU and UKLA. In essence, we are trying to help teachers find and share pleasure in reading and build new communities of readers, on and offline. Such communities are needed since developing a broad and deep
knowledge of children’s literature and other texts is no mean feat. To keep it updated requires passion, perseverance and very considerable commitment. This is being shown by the Reading Group leaders and members, who are not only teachers but librarians, teaching assistants,
student teachers, early years practitioners, reading
volunteers and even parents. Groups meet six times a year to enrich their knowledge, understanding and practice in order to nurture children’s desire to read. Group members seek to use their enriched repertoires to create social reading environments, tailor their reader recommendations, make wise choices for reading aloud, and engage in book blether, a highly significant and somewhat underrated aspect of being a reader. In these and other CPD contexts right across the country, teachers
Wordle based on NLT Survey (Clark and Teravainen, 2015) Wordle based on NLT Survey (Clark and Teravainen, 2015)
!
In responding to these challenges, the Open University developed a RfP practitioner-focused community website based on the research.
https://researchrichpedagogies.org/research/reading-for-pleasure This has myriad resources, including classroom film clips, video interviews (with teachers and researchers), PowerPoints for CPD, self- reviews, Top Texts, Authors in the Spotlight and nearly 200 examples of teachers’ research-informed practice. Other OU linked initiatives include the creation of nearly 80 Teachers’ Reading Groups with UKLA; work with 21 Initial Teacher Education organisations/ universities; Academy Trust projects in Birmingham and Macclesfield; annual OU/UKLA conferences; and the Egmont Reading for
8 Books for Keeps No.234 January 2019
are exploring ways to establish staff knowledge of authors in order to create a baseline of strengths and areas for development. Many staff teams use the original Teachers as Readers survey, others create an Alphabet of Authors (both available on the OU website5
). In
the latter, through allocating particular letters of the alphabet to small groups, the collective knowledge of all can be shared. It’s a fun way of highlighting knowledge gaps, maybe in world literature, poetry or texts reflecting realities? Analysing their results, one school found an over-reliance on popular authors, so the literacy lead checked the list of books that had been read aloud to children across the previous two terms. To her consternation every single text had been published before the turn of the century! There is nothing wrong with ‘old but gold’, but children deserve to meet a wide range of writers. Building on the baseline, literacy leads, working where possible with librarians, seek ways to widen their own and other staff members’ repertoires. These might include: setting personal reading goals linked
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