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image Will children fare better as readers if they can pick their own books?  Yes, say Nancie Atwell and some other reading gurus.

The New York Times has the details. The key, as I see it as an ex-child, is balance—between the compulsory assignments and the joy-of-it books that can build the reading habit.

A little Jules Verne to go along with Jane Austen, please.

I know: Austen books may be more “literary.” But Verne himself excels as a story-teller. Good teachers can introduce students to both kinds of writing and try to point out the difference. Some sprawling major literary classics—masterpieces by today’s definitions, such as Moby-Dick—would probably have appalled Austen. (Update, 11 a.n.: No anti-Austen slam intended. Here’s to variety!)

One justification for the TeleRead vision of a well-stocked national digital library system is that it would put online a greater variety of books to match students’ precise needs and interests. TeleRead would be in line with S.R. Ranganathan’s Five Laws of Library Science, including “Every reader his book” and “Every book its reader.”

Again, as I see it, the optimal scenario would a mix of compulsory books—Moby Dick among them?—and for-fun ones. If nothing else, how about more efforts to point students in the direction of classics that share common themes with popular books and movies of the moment? Teachers can also work to nudge students toward the better and more challenging books matching their interests, just as the Times article notes.

In a related vein, female teachers and female curriculum specialists often favor books of more appeal to girls than to boys, and student-chosen titles would be at least a partial solution.

A cause for commercial publishers

Let’s hope that commercial publishers get behind the choice movement without overdoing it. First off by far, it’s the right thing educationally. Second, along the way, it’s good market development. Gung-ho young readers are more likely to become enthusiastic older ones.

Some of the most eagerly read fiction may even come from authors in the same cities as the students. The movement for “choice reading” could be open up some interesting possibilities for local and regional literature, especially if libraries, schools and bookstores worked together to identify the most promising homegrown titles.

 
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