Keeping Kids Off the Summer Slide
Keeping
Kids Off the Summer Slide
Source: Reading Is
Fundamental
Something is waiting for many children
this summer, and their parents don't even know it's out there. It's called
"summer slide," and it describes what happens when young minds sit
idle for three months.
As parents approach the summer
break, many are thinking about the family vacation, trips to the pool, how to
keep children engaged in activities at home, the abrupt changes to everyone's
schedule - and how to juggle it all. What they might not be focusing on is how
much educational ground their children could lose during the three-month break
from school, particularly when it comes to reading. Reading Is Fundamental
(RIF), the nation's oldest and largest children's literacy organization,
believes there is no better time than this summer to begin helping our children
bridge the gap in learning between the end of one school year and the beginning
of the next one. "Motivating children to read throughout the year is
essential to building lifelong readers," says Carol H. Rasco, president
and CEO of RIF. "And reading is the doorway to all other learning."
Experts agree that children who read
during the summer gain reading skills, while those who do not often slide
backward. According to the authors of a November 2002 report from Johns Hopkins Center for
Summer Learning "A conservative estimate of lost instructional time is
approximately two months or roughly 22 percent of the school year.... It's
common for teachers to spend at least a month re-teaching material that
students have forgotten over the summer. That month of re-teaching eliminates a
month that could have been spent on teaching new information and skills."
Furthermore, they note that family income plays a significant role in
determining the magnitude of this summer slide. Students from low-income
families "...experience an average summer learning loss in reading
achievement of over two months."
Not only do these students suffer
greater sliding during the summer, they also experience cumulative effects of
greater learning loss each summer. Sociologists Karl Alexander and Doris
Entwisle have shown that the cumulative effect of summer learning differences
is a primary cause of widening achievement gaps between students of lower and
higher socioeconomic levels. Research demonstrates that while student
achievement for both middle and lower-income students improves at similar rates
during the school year, low-income students experience cumulative summer
learning losses throughout their elementary school years.
Summer slide affects millions of
children each year in this country-but it doesn't have to. To help prevent
children from losing ground to summer slide, RIF has compiled a variety of
activities that parents, caregivers, and members of community organizations can
use to keep learning fun throughout the summer break.
- Reading Tips for Families
- Summer
Reading Tips for Kids
- Tips for Keeping
Kids Reading This Summer—Take Them to the Library
Publication Release: July 26, 2007

