March is over and another year has passed where elementary teachers have celebrated reading with “March is Reading” month.
I like a party as much as the next person. I love socializing, dressing up if there is a theme, and who can forget about the food. Okay, so I love eating! I don’t consider myself a party pooper by any stretch, but can you imagine trying to have a Hawaiian Luau for an entire month? That is a lot of pineapple and roast pig!
The point I am trying to make is that I feel we are doing our students a disservice when it comes to “March is Reading” month. Every day, on the calendar sent home with my oldest, is a different way for my child and his classmates to celebrate reading. Whether it is wearing flip-flops or reading with an e-Reader, the idea is to motivate students to want to read and for them to be excited about it. For 31 days students are asked to do something different in association with reading to make it feel fun. Again, I go back to what I said at the beginning of this post, imagine going to a pig roast 31 days in a row. After awhile, you are going to crave something different.
I want my students to be excited about reading, but if they have been repeatedly bombarded in elementary school every March for an average of 6 years, they may have a bad taste in their mouth by the time they reach middle school. Don’t get me wrong, there are other factors too. Such as giving students questions at the end of every single chapter. Something Kelly Gallagher calls Readacide
I don’t want to take just a month to focus on the importance of reading or to celebrate it. I want to celebrate it all year and motivate my students throughout the whole year and throughout their lives hopefully.
I have always been diligently trying to find when and how middle school students lose their passion for reading. I have been pestering my 8th grade students all year about why they don’t like reading and I get responses such as:
- They don’t have time
- Availability of resources in limited
- Being forced to read something that is not interesting
- March is reading month killed their love.
The last reason made me raise my eyebrow and let out a hearty, “really?” However, it did make me think long and hard about “March is Reading” month that takes places in schools. I will admit, I don’t do a lot in the month of March as far as recognizing the month and the reading focus the month brings. My students are reading and I still like to read to them because I feel it is important.
I am always open to new ways to get my students motivated to read, but I am not going to do overkill with my students. This is not an attack on elementary teachers or any other teachers. I simply am asking that we should reflect on our practices and decide if what we are doing is best for students.