The power of reading, the power of libraries and the "summer slide"
Letter published in Language Magazine, May, 2017
Stephen Krashen
http://tinyurl.com/ll3d36s
Language
 Magazine readers might be interested in a case study that confirms 
Andrew Johnson's recommendations for dealing with the summer slide in 
reading 
("Tales of summer," April, 2017).  In a published journal paper, we (Shu-Yuan Lin, Fay Shin, and S. Krashen)
described the case of "Sophia," a high school student whose 
reading test scores dropped during three consecutive academic years, but
 increased during the summer. In fact, Sophia's fall reading scores were
 higher than they were the previous spring. What
 did Sophia do during the summer that caused this improvement? She did 
not attend special classes, did not get instruction in reading 
strategies, did not
 work through vocabulary lists, and did not write book reports. All she 
did was read for pleasure. According
 to her mother, Sophia read an average of about 50 books per summer, 
largely from the local public library. Early favorites were the Nancy 
Drew and Sweet
 Valley High series, followed by the Christy Miller series and other 
books by Francine Pascal, the author of the Sweet Valley series. (Sophia
 informed us that she was “addicted” to the Christy Miller books; it 
took her only a week to read the entire series
 “because I just couldn’t put them down.”)
Sophia’s
 mother told us that during the school year Sophia was so busy with 
school work that she had hardly any free time to read. Her mother, in 
fact, joked
 that it might be a good idea to keep her daughter at home during the 
school year in order to increase her scores on standardized tests of 
reading.
Lin, S-Y, Shin, F., & Krashen, S. 
2007. Sophia’s choice: Summer reading. Knowledge Quest 35(4). Available for free download at
www.sdkrashen.com,
 under "free voluntary reading."
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