Getting Boys to Read—Part One
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Getting Boys to Read—Part One



If you’re trying to get the reluctant young male reader in your life to read more often—or read at all—you might already know it can be a challenging feat. According to a national survey conducted by the Young Adult Library Services Association in 2001, boys (average age of 14) who weren’t interested in reading pointed to the following reasons:

So how can a parent/guardian, teacher or librarian overcome these challenges? One way is to pay attention to what boys are reading. Smith and Wilhelm, authors of Reading Don’t Fix No Chevys: Literacy in the Lives of Young Men, say boys differ from girls in the choices they make of reading material:

With those points in mind, here are some tips that can help encourage boys to read:

Tips and Strategies

“Studies show that 90 percent of elementary school teachers are female,” says Michael Sullivan, director of the Weeks Public Library in New Hampshire and author of Connecting Boys With Books: What Libraries Can Do. “Seventy-five percent of high school teachers are female.” Most people who boys see connected with reading are female, he says, but boys identify with men. (to be continued tomorrow in Part Two)

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- Getting Boys To Read
Getting Boys to Read—Part OneIf you’re trying to get the reluctant young male reader in your life to read more often—or read at all—you might already know it can be a challenging feat. According to a national survey conducted by the Young Adult...

- Getting Boys To Read—part Four
(continued—Part Four Getting Boys to Read) TIPS FOR TEACHERS AND LIBRARIANS Patrick Jones and Dawn Cartwright Fiorelli, authors of “Overcoming the Obstacle Course: Teenage Boys and Reading,” (Teacher Librarian magazine, Feb. 2003) say there...

- Getting Boys To Read—part Three
(continued—Part Three Getting Boys to Read) Sullivan suggests parents and teachers let boys read what they want, no matter how gross or fantastical, and avoid getting caught up in a book’s page count or reading level. “Kids don’t read to...

- Getting Boys To Read—part Two
(continued from page one—Getting Boys to Read) If boys see their fathers or other important male figure, reading, they’re more likely to read. “They need to see men and books together,” he says. • Start with what he loves. If your son...

- A Conversation With Author Omar Tyree
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