Lost in books: How to Foster Reading Culture In Schools
Reading goes faster if you don't sweat comprehension!
Fostering a Reading Culture
To foster a reading culture I will discuss 4 areas I focus on and although the information is presented in linear fashion the areas do overlap.
Personal Story in the Home
In the Classroom
- Classroom Daily 4: this allows for student autonomy and choice which is very powerful!
- Read to Self: Students read a book of their choice
- Listening to Reading using the Epic! app: This is a free app that allows students to read a variety of books
- Work with Teacher: Students will learn reading comprehension skills in a guided small group setting
- extensive, modern Classroom Library: I try to ensure that my books are relevant to student's interests, a mix of fiction and nonfiction, and there is a wide variety of reading levels
- model reading: During Read to Self I will read as well I will read outloud a Battle of the Books novel during our snack time
- Physical space is Indigenized and set-up to create a safe space which has multiple modes of seating which include comfortable reading areas
- promote participation in school and district reading initatives
In the School
- TL promotes and organizes Battle of the Books: Students read a set number of novels, compete at the school level to form a team, winners move onto Zones, then to districts!
- TL promotes and organizes Sagebrush Book Awards: Students read a variety of genres and vote on their favorite book/novel
- TL organizes DEAR - Drop Everything And Read: A yearly event in which the entire school drops everything and reads for 20 minutes
- TL promotes Unplug & Play: Family Literacy Week: A week long event that encourages families to participate in literacy activities
- TL promotes the TNRL Thompson-Nicola Regional Library Summer Reading Club
- TL and TL Assistant create monthly displays that promote reading
- TL and TL Assistant give book talks during the library book sign-out time
In the District
- Bright Red Book Bus: During the summer a bus filled with books travels around to different schools and kids can get free books
- District library committee organizes Unplug & Play: Family Literacy Week
- District library committee organizes Battle of the Books
In the Future
Work Cited
(2020). YouTube. Retrieved June 1, 2023, from https://youtu.be/vyFCZPgM5sY.
Reading goes faster if you don’t sweat comprehension. thecuriousbrain.com. (2012, March 8). https://thecuriousbrain.com/?p=124350
SD73 Sagebrush Book Awards. SD73 SAGEBRUSH BOOK AWARDS. (n.d.). https://sagebrushbookawards.weebly.com/
Emily_TNRL. (2023, May 18). Summer reading clubs. Thompson-Nicola Regional Library. https://www.tnrl.ca/programs-events/src/
McNee, Darcy. (2023, May 23). LIBE 477B 93Q 2023S1 Special Topics in Teacher Librarianship - SP TPCS TCH LIBR [Zoom Meeting].
Welcome to battle of the books. Welcome To Battle Of The Books. (n.d.). https://bob.sd73.bc.ca/

This is a strong post filled with excellent strategies to foster a reading culture. The embedded links provide many great takeaways for your reader. I appreciate the balance you have created here between personal, reflective narrative and outside reading in research.
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed reading your post especially the video showing the engagement of students and their wanting to do video reviews of novels as it teaches students so many additional skills besides the reading. Collaboration, writing a script, considering the audience, how to actually film, edit and load these videos. Exciting stuff! Plus, they go home with a summer reading list full of recommendations from their peers.
ReplyDeleteI totally agree that reading culture begins in the home. If only all parents got on board from a young age. This post got me thinking about the fact that, though I read to my little guy all the time, and I always have an audiobook on the go (multitasking!), he doesn't often SEE me reading for pleasure, and I should be modelling that. I love your idea of having an elder come in to do storytelling once a month. While it's not "reading" per se, it definitely gets students engaging with story and requires them to use the same comprehension skills. Plus, it ties in with the elementary Big Ideas! Thanks for sharing.
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