310 likes | 326 Views
From scorched earth to new landscapes... Jonathan Douglas The National Literacy Trust. The National Literacy Trust. Poverty data - IFS. Between 96/97 and 09/10 median income rose on average 1.9% p.a. Between 10/11 and 19/20 average income expected to fall by 7%
E N D
From scorched earth to new landscapes...Jonathan DouglasThe National Literacy Trust
Poverty data - IFS • Between 96/97 and 09/10 median income rose on average 1.9% p.a. • Between 10/11 and 19/20 average income expected to fall by 7% • By 2020 24% of children will live in relative poverty (increase of 800,000 in 2011) • Living costs in rural areas 10%-20% higher than in urban areas (Rowntree Research)
If you have poor literacy you are • More likely to live in a non-working household • 22% of men and 30% of women with literacy below entry level 2 live in nonworking households. • Less likely to have children • Individuals with low levels of literacy are more likely to lead solitary lives without any children. • More likely to live in overcrowded housing • Individuals with low literacy levels are more likely to live in overcrowded housing with reduced access to technology. • More likely to experience divorce • A literate family is less likely to experience divorce, as divorce rates amongst those with high literacy are low, and significantly lower than those with poor literacy skills.
Literacy a way out of poverty • Reduction in reliance on state benefits • An increase in literacy cuts the likelihood of reliance on benefits from 19% to 6% • Less likely to own your own home • A modest rise in literacy level sees the likelihood of a man owning their own house rise from 40% to 78%.
Literacy and Social Mobility Reading for Change – OECD 2005
Enjoying Reading at Year 6 Source: Sainsbury & Schagen 2004
Literacy and breaking the cycle • Children from the poorest backgrounds are on average a year behind middle class children when they start school • However behaviour in the early years (the home learning environment) can close the gap. Libraries are a crucial ingredient. (EPPE)
Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children • Differences in children’s language at 2 years are explained better by their early communication environment than their social background • Children’s school readiness is predicted by early language, early communication environment as well as children’s social background
Early communications environment • Books owned at 6 months • Home and parenting score • Amount of TV on at home in first 18 months • Frequency of trips to the library www.literacytrust.org.uk
Frequency of trips to the library at 18 months • Increased access to books • Story and rhyme times • Shared times in a focused environment • Talking time on the way to and the way from the library • “Stimulation of the outdoors” www.literacytrust.org.uk
Literacy is the best ladder out of poverty Libraries are a solution for child poverty
New policy context in England • Focus on literacy in schools • Systematic synthetic phonics the methodology • Legislation for universal reading test at 6 announced in the 2010 Queen’s Speech • Rewrite of the National Curriculum
Economic Policy • Cuts and the economic consequence • Particular concerns for impact on communities in Scotland, Wales, Midlands and North, especially coastal • Focus on regional/community solutions
Local and community services Increased local freedoms • Academies and free schools • Local priorities and local accountability Decreased local resources • Social return on investment • Payment by results www.literacytrust.org.uk
So where do libraries fit into approaches to tackle child poverty through literacy? www.literacytrust.org.uk
Influencing aspirations and expectations: home and family • The home has three times the impact of high quality early education • Parental interest in reading is a more powerful force than social class, family size and level of parental education • Even at 16 parental interest in a child’s reading is the single greatest predictor of achievement
Priorities • Growing demand for literacy • Promote literacy that is relevant • Accept responsibility and reward • Target those who need support most • Remember why we read www.literacytrust.org.uk
What targeting means – school libraries • Personalisation • Move to approaches which understand the different needs of different pupil • Resources and data needed to support this • Understanding ethnicities and cultures • 43.1% of Asian Pupils who did not use the library did so because they felt it had a poor book stock as opposed to 24.4% of Black and 33.6% of white pupils • Gender • Boys significantly less likely to own their own books • Differentiated gender use of technology • Free school meals • FSM children more likely to be turned onto reading by being told why it will be useful to them
Remembering why we read www.literacytrust.org.uk
If it wasn’t for the library I wouldn’t be reading at all www.literacytrust.org.uk
Thank you! Follow jdliteracytrust on Twitter Befriend National Literacy Trust on Facebook Jonathan.douglas@literacytrust.org.uk www.literacytrust.org.uk www.readingforlife.org.uk