“Reading Enjoyment” is Ready for School: Foregrounding Affect and Sociality in Children’s Reading for Pleasure

Author:

Boyask RuthORCID,Harrington Celeste,Milne John,Smith Bradley

Abstract

AbstractWhile debate on declines in children’s literacy is ongoing in Aotearoa New Zealand, very little attention in research and policy is paid to reading enjoyment and its capacity to support the reading development of children. Developed alongside a series of studies on children’s reading for pleasure this article makes a theoretically informed argument to place reading enjoyment at the centre of literacy education in schools. Our argument is underpinned by a psycho-social conceptualisation of enjoyment that emphasises the fundamental sociality of emotion. Foregrounding affect and sociality in children and young people’s reading speaks to the potential of teachers being with childrenandtheir whānau together reading for pleasure. When children are at school they can participate in the sociality of reading for pleasure, sharing its enjoyment with other class members and teachers without coming into conflict with the priorities of life outside of school. If schools embed reading enjoyment in their programmes, they might then have greater capacity to follow the literacy and communication strategy and work towards sharing the collective enjoyment of reading with families, whānau, and communities.

Funder

National Library of New Zealand

Auckland University of Technology

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Education

Reference44 articles.

1. Boyask, R., May, R., Milne, J., Jackson, J., Harrington, C., Hankin, R., & Le Fleming Hall, D. (2022), Experiences of New Zealand Children Actively Reading for Pleasure: Final Research Report, Ministry of Social Development.

2. Boyask, R., Mounsey, M., Couch, D., & Smith, B. (2021a). A changing story of reading at Huntly College. National Library of New Zealand.

3. Boyask, R., Wall, C., Harrington, C., Milne, J., & Couch, D. (2021b). Reading for pleasure: For the collective good of Aotearoa New Zealand. National Library of New Zealand.

4. Burnett, C., & Merchant, G. (2018). Affective encounters: Enchantment and the possibility of reading for pleasure. Literacy, 52(2), 62–69. https://doi.org/10.1111/lit.12144

5. Chamberlain, M., & Essery, R. (2020). PIRLS 2016: The importance of access to books and New Zealand students' reading confidence. Educational Measurement and Assessment, Ministry of Education.

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