Wednesday, December 31, 2025

1st January 2026 The Year of Reading















Happy New Year from Alison Lester in Fish Creek and me in Sydney.

In the Chinese Zodiac, it is The Year of the Horse.

The United Nations The UN has declared 2026 as three International Years: the International Year of the Woman Farmer, focusing on gender equality in agriculture; the International Year of Volunteers for Sustainable Development, celebrating volunteer impact; and the International Year of Rangelands and Pastoralists, highlighting sustainable land use. These observances aim to raise global awareness, promote action, and empower communities and individuals working in these vital areas for sustainable development. 

Each year in the library, we usually start the displays with something connected to the Year being celebrated, such as the Year of the Horse for 2026 on the Chinese Zodiac, or the Year of Volunteers as proposed by the United Nations for 2026, but the year that I think is the one we should be celebrating, is the one that the U.K. is celebrating, The Year of ReadingThe UK campaign brings together a range of partner organisations, from publishers and Government departments to Literacy charities.



Reading for pleasure in the UK is in sharp decline, with only 
50% of adults reading regularly—a 13.8% drop since 2015—and just 1 in 3 children (32.7%) enjoying reading in their free time, the lowest in two decades. Key drivers include social media, lack of time, and reduced engagement among young adults and boys.   Like here in Australia, the UK has changed the way they teach reading in schools. They put more 
emphasis on the strategies espoused by the Science of Reading (SoR) research and their five 
pillars of Early Literacy Skills.

In the process they downplayed Reading for Pleasure, the role of the school library and the importance of reading with other enabling adults such as parents.  Now that they have realised their folly, once again there is a 'big push' in the UK for schools to ensure they have Reading for Pleasure as a clear outcome for students. Teachers are being trained to heed the Reading for Pleasure research. Here in Australia we need to do that too. We need to stop the school systems, and schools who feel they no longer need a school library, a trained teacher librarian or any form of Reading for Pleasure program before it is done and becomes impossible to reinstate.

Reading isn’t just a hobby; it’s a powerful tool linked to stronger writing skills, better well-being, and even higher lifetime earnings. In fact, research shows that children who become proficient readers can earn substantially more over their lifetime.

By making reading a daily habit, we can help lay the foundation for strong literacy skills and ensure every child has the opportunity to thrive. Schools and parents owe this to children and one of the easiest ways to do this is to model reading. They need to make time and value that reading to children time.

Of course this will not be easy to do, but the longer we do not espouse Reading for Pleasure and put school strategies into place to make sure it happens, the harder it will be. The UK plan has lots of ideas to offer Australian teachers and teacher librarians for parent information sessions, ideas for school staff meetings and ideas to use in the classroom.


If reading is to become a lifelong habit then people must see themselves as participants in a community that views reading as a significant and enjoyable activity. Overall, the research highlights:

  • Children who know adults who read for pleasure take it for granted that reading is a valuable and worthwhile activity (Csikszentmihalyi, 1991)
  • The home environment exerts a significant effect on academic motivation, which is over and above that predicted by socio-economic status (Gottfried, Fleming & Gottfried, 1998). Thus, children whose home environment is more cognitively stimulating have higher academic motivation than children whose home is lacking such stimulation
  • Parents who believe that reading is a source of entertainment have children with more positive views about reading than parents who only emphasise the skills aspect of reading (e.g. Sonnenschein et al., 2000)
  • Children of parents who believed that reading is a source of pleasure had greater reading motivation scores in primary school (Baker & Scher, 2002) and
  • Children are more likely to continue to be readers in homes where books and reading are valued (Baker & Scher, 2002).

Yes, this a 'hotchpotch' of my thinking, but as I plan for the school year ahead, I am as adamant as always that the key to school success lies with a school executive, teacher librarians, and teachers who read, value reading and promote reading to their stakeholders.

Let's do it!





1 comment:

  1. I’ve shared this important post with other TLs. I wish it could also be read (and acted on) by every school Principal. Your blog is off to a great start for 2026!

    ReplyDelete