麻豆果冻传媒

In Short

Introducing ‘Seeding Reading’

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This post is part of Seeding Reading, series of articles and analysis by 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Ed Policy Program and the Joan Ganz Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop. See also the Learning Tech section of EdCentral.org and the JGCC blog
This post is part of Seeding Reading, series of articles and analysis by 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Ed Policy Program and the Joan Ganz Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop. See also the Learning Tech section of EdCentral.org and the JGCC blog

Today鈥檚 children are surrounded by digital media of all kinds. How will they ever learn to read?

That question is at the heart of Seeding Reading: Investing in Children鈥檚 Literacy in a Digital Age, a new series of articles and analysis brought to you by 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Education Policy Program and the Joan Ganz Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop. 听Over the next six months, we will be exploring early education and parenting initiatives that are harnessing new technologies; scrutinizing the marketplace of digital 鈥渞eading鈥 products; and highlighting new research that may illuminate how communications technologies and digital media are affecting the learning of reading, the act of reading, and the reading brain, in both good ways and bad.

The intersection of technology and reading is already populated with intriguing writing about teen and adult readers, whether it is by Clive Thompson in his new book or Nicholas Carr in . Common Sense Media, a non-profit advocacy and media-curation site, released a this spring showing that, by their teenage years, students are not so interested in reading for pleasure, and that the amount of time children spend reading 听each day for pleasure 鈥渄rops off significantly as they get older.鈥

This project will zoom in on the years when children are babies, toddlers, preschoolers and elementary school students. In those formative years for learning language and literacy skills, the digital age brings a paradox: Good reading skills are more important than ever for success in life, and yet children and their families are increasingly surrounded by new tools and digital distractions that affect the act of reading and communication. 听The Common Sense Media report, for example, showed a dip between 2006 and 2013 in the amount of time parents spent reading to their children.

Reading scientist Maryanne Wolfe, author of , describes the challenge this way:

Will the present generation become so accustomed to immediate access to on-screen information that the range of attentional, inferential, and reflective capacities in the present reading brain will become less developed?

We started to grapple with these questions in 2012 with the release of听, a paper that scanned the early literacy landscape to help us better understand how technology was being used and what role it should play. 听A sense of urgency runs through that paper and our new work: are, for the most part, distressingly weak. More than two-thirds of fourth-graders are not reading at grade level (known in research circles as 鈥渞eading proficiently.鈥) Among disadvantaged children, the percentage is more than 80 percent.

And yet with challenge comes opportunity. With 鈥渁lways on鈥 media around children and parents every day, what are some new ways to help turn children on to words, language and text, ideas? 听Could they feel even more agency and excitement about learning to read than the generations behind them? Could new technologies offer chances to children with reading difficulties that didn鈥檛 exist before? 听We won鈥檛 shy from the warning signs but throughout this project we will aim to uncover innovative ideas and spotlight new ways to seed reading for children of the digital age.

As Wolfe writes the end of her book:

The children and teachers of the future should not be faced with a choice between books and screens, between newspapers and capsuled versions of the news on the Internet, or between print and other media. Our transition generation has an opportunity, if we seize it, to pause and use our most reflective capacities, to use everything at our disposal to prepare for the formation of what will come next.

The first articles of听听补谤别听by Abbie Lieberman听and听Pediatricians Use Video Tools to Promote Early Literacy听by guest blogger Sarah Jackson.听The Seeding Reading project is conducted in partnership with the听听and was made possible by a grant from the Pritzker Children鈥檚 Initiative.

More 麻豆果冻传媒 the Authors

Lisa Guernsey
E&W-GuernseyL
Lisa Guernsey

Senior Director, Birth to 12th Grade Policy; Co-Founder and Director, Learning Sciences Exchange

Introducing ‘Seeding Reading’