Primary Practice

Why we should be reading to our class every day.

Do you read to your class….do you read to your class every day or do you read to your class at all?

Its an interesting question, especially now that the current Primary curriculum pressurises and prescripts learning times and teaching content to such a degree.  So is it now possible to introduce such a feature into our class learning programme?

If you have ever had to do a time audit of your teaching you will find out just how revealing it can be. In pushing for a balanced and timed curriculum we are told to count all the time slippages we can identify and tighten up on teaching times.

Take this example (it is true) – a teacher decides that 10 minutes before the end of the school day she will send her class to collect their coats and bags and bring them back into the classroom ready to leave. Has she in fact shortened her day and also the teaching time for the class? Well 10 minutes doesn’t seem long but lets see how that accumulates over a term.

10 minutes a day for 5 days equals 50 minutes a week – multiply that by the number of weeks in a term and the class is spending 12.5 hours collecting coats in the Autumn term alone! – which is probably the equivalent of the teaching time allowed for lets say music!

My point is this – in a pressurised curriculum can we justify spending 15 minutes a day in reading to the class?

Reading to your class is a very special opportunity and to be honest a privilege to share with your class. It is a time when the children can simply relax and listen as the story unfolds. But why is this such a special time and why is it so effective?

As teachers I am sure we realise the importance of reading to our children at home. Again this is a special shared time, most probably when the children are in bed and just before they settle down. I did this with my boys and in the half light we shared some great stories and adventures together. There were no screens, no TV, no computer or tablet just the 2 of us and the book.

Together we solved mysteries, fought bullies, built soapbox carts and messed about with friends – in reading about these and other adventures we became part of the action, part of the gang and part of the adventure. We loved it !

However, parents may not be representative in our approach. We would hope that the same happens at home, but does it? Parents and children both seem to share an ever increasing whirl that occupies the times after work and school. Children are more often than not taken from club to club from activity to activity….ballet, football, athletics, cubs, brownies and many more. It is hard enough to find the time for homework let alone time to spend together!

But perhaps this unceasing whirl is the very reason we SHOULD be giving time to spend with our children. It is a quiet time to step back from the racing around and its a time to share the closeness that we hope to have in family life. It cements the bonds of families, the trust and security given by parents and also is a chance for children to express personal happiness, fears or doubts.

Whilst I am giving good reasons for Parents reading to children, I can say that many of these positive features are apparent when we as teachers read to the class.

It is a quiet time when we can step back from the hustle and bustle of the learning day, we can share together the adventures that we hear about in the books we read and identify with the characters we meet and follow. The stories can take us out of our own lives and into new and fantastic world and places and our imaginations can run wild – we share this together…teacher and class / children and children. It forms a special bond.

Of course if we were to look at this simply from an educational point of view (and please don’t) we can refer to such learning skills as

The list could go on and on…..

I have never been in a class where the class did not enjoy these reading times – never !

The practicalities of reading

Extra things to consider or think about

Recommended books

I am going to mention only a couple of books here that have been successful in my classes – you will, of course have your own favourites or will enjoy searching out others.

Both choices are Y3/Y4

In both cases children went out and bought their own copies of the books to read and follow at home.

So there we are – my case for reading to your class! If you do currently read to your class then I expect you can empathise with the sentiments I have written here.

If you don’t then perhaps give it another thought – you might be surprised at how popular it becomes!

 

 

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