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What
Are
Reading
Australian2024edition
RenaissanceStudentArtworkContestOverallWinner
Thestudentartworkfeaturedonthecoverandthroughoutthisreportwascreatedbyinpre-
KindergartentoYear12whotookpartinanartcontestaskingthemtoillustrateonthetopicofeither"Howreadingmakesmefeel"or"How
readingmakesyoufeelaboutthefuture.”
AbouttheArtist
Roza.
Year4
Girlreadingabookbyatreewithanamazingworldhappeningaroundher.
Copyright©2024byRenaissanceLearning,Inc.Allrightsreserved.PrintedinAustralia.Alllogos,designs,andbrandnamesforRenaissance’sproductsandservicesaretrademarksofRenaissanceLearning,Inc.,anditssubsidiaries,registered,common
law,orpendingregistrationintheUnitedStates.Allotherproductandcompanynamesshouldbeconsideredthepropertyoftheirrespectivecompaniesandorganisations.METAMETRICS®andLEXILE®aretrademarksofMetaMetrics,Inc.,andare
registeredintheUnitedStatesandabroad.MicrosoftCopilotandMicrosoftBingChataretrademarksoftheMicrosoftgroupofcompanies.
IntroductionCopyright©2024byJulianneRobar.
ThispublicationisprotectedbyUSandinternationalcopyrightlaws.Itisunlawfultoduplicateorreproduceanycopyrightedmaterialwithoutauthorisationfromthecopyrightholder.Formoreinformation,contact:
RENAISSANCEPOBox8036
WisconsinRapids,WI54495-8036
(800)338-4204
.au
educatordevelopment@
Suggestedcitation:
RenaissanceLearning.(2024).Whatkidsarereading:2024edition..au/wkar
Contents
Introduction5
OverviewofReadingHabitsinAustralia6
KindergartentoYear2(K-2)7
EstablishingStrongReadingFoundations8
Years3-511
Years3-5:MaintainingReadingMomentum12
Years6-815
Years6-8:Re-engagingYoungSchoolReaders16
Years9-1219
Years9-12:RealitiesofHighSchoolReading20
AbouttheReport22
MatchingBookstoKids23
AboutAcceleratedReaderandAboutmyON24
4|Introduction|WhatKidsAreReading
Introduction|WhatKidsAreReading|5
ByJulianneRobar
SrDirectorMetadata&ProductInteroperability
ReadingIstheFuture.AtRenaissance,we’vealwaysknowntheimportanceofreadinginaccelerating
learningforallstudents.Wefirstpublishedthisreport16yearsago,andwecontinuetoupdateit,becauseweknowthatreadingbuildslifelonglearners,furtherscommunication,sparkstheimagination,andfostersinnovation.Forthesereasons,andmanymore,webelievethatreadingisthefuture,andwe'veshapedthereportthisyearwiththisthemeinmind.
Weknowthatreadingmatters,andthatitwill
alwaysmatter,andweareexcitedtosharewhat
kidsarereadingtodayinordertoinspirewhattheymightreadtomorrow.Themoretimekidsspend
reading,themoretheypracticecriticalskills,andthemoretheypractice,themoreproficienttheybecome.
“Themoretimekidsspend
reading,themorethey
practicecriticalskills,andtheymoretheypractice,the
moreproficienttheybecome”
Whyisitimportanttobeagoodreader?Readinghelpsustoprocesstheinformationweencountereveryday.Readingisasetofskillsstudentsneednotjustwhentheyareyounger;it’sanactivitytheywillperformtounderstandandactivelyparticipateintheirworldfortheirentirelives.
Readingcantransportkidstonewplacesand
introducethemtonewideaseverytimetheypickupabook.Justbyreading,kidsencounternew
wordstoaddtotheirvocabulary.Welookedinto
justhowmanywordskidsareexposedtoby
readingdailythroughoutthecourseoftheir
schooling,andthenumberisastronomical.TurntotheResearchAnalysisforYearsK–2,foundon
page7,tolearnmore.
Comprehensionlagsbehindreadingcomplexity
The2024reporthighlightsagapbetweenthecomplexityofbookschosenbyAustralian
studentsandtheircomprehension,particularlyastheymovefromprimarytosecondary
school,indicatinganeedforfocusedsupport.
BoostinreadingengagementamongAustralianStudents
The2024reportrevealsaremarkableincreaseinreadingengagementamongAustralian
students,withtheaveragenumberofbooks
readperstudentrisingfrom13.2in2023to17.6in2024.
6|Overview|WhatKidsAreReading
OverviewofReadingHabitsinAustralia
ParticipationandScope
The2024reportencompassesdatafrom62,559studentsacross440schoolsinAustralia,
representingaslightdeclineof7%comparedtothepreviousyear,where67,221students
participated.Despitethedropinstudentnumbers,engagementwiththeAcceleratedReader(AR)programremainedstrong,asevidencedbytheincreaseinthetotalnumberofquizzestaken.
Australianstudentscompleted1,108,147quizzesandpassed909,365,reflectingarobustlevelofparticipationandacommitmenttoreading.
Onaverage,studentsread17.6bookseachin2024,comparedto13.2booksperstudentin2023.Thisdemonstratesatremendousgrowthinreadingengagementandanincreasedpassionfor
readingamongstudentsutilisingtheARprogram.
Thesignificantriseintotalwordsread,from17,271,156,025lastyearto22,223,794,799thisyear,
suggeststhatstudentswhoparticipatedwerereadingmoreintensively,choosinglongerandmorecomplexbooks.Thisincreaseinreadingvolumeisencouraging,asitindicatesadeepening
engagementwithreading,evenastheoverallnumberofparticipantshasslightlydecreased.
ReadingTrendsandPerformance
Theaveragebookdifficulty,measuredbytheATOSscore,remainedsteadyat3.8,indicatingthat
Australianstudentsareconsistentlychallengingthemselveswithmoderatelydifficulttexts.However,theaveragecomprehensionscore(APC)stayedat75%,thesameasthepreviousyear.Thissteady
APCsuggeststhatwhilestudentsreadmore,theirabilitytocomprehendthesetextsisimprovingatadifferentrate.Thisfindingiscrucialforeducators,highlightingtheneedfortargetedinterventionstoenhancecomprehensionskillsalongsidereadingvolume.
Thereportalsorevealsadistinctpatternin
readinghabitsbetweenprimaryandsecondaryschoolstudents.Primarystudents(K-6)
exhibitedhigherlevelsofengagementwiththeARprogram,reflectedinboththenumberof
quizzestakenandthecomplexityofthebookschosen.Incontrast,secondarystudents(7-12)showedamarkeddeclineinengagementandreadingcomprehension,withmanyoptingforlesschallengingmaterial.Thistransitionfromprimarytosecondaryschoolrepresentsa
criticalperiodwheretargetedsupportis
neededtomaintainandbuildonthereadingskillsdevelopedinearlieryears.
Overview|WhatKidsAreReading|7
YearsK-2
Intheearlyyearsofschooling(K-2),Australianstudentsdemonstratedastrongpreferencefor
booksbylocalauthors,withAnhDoandAaronBlabeyleadingthelistofmostpopularbooks.
Titlessuchas"WeirDo"and"TheBadGuys"wereparticularlyfavoured,reflectingtheappealofhumourandrelatabilityinthisagegroup.TheaverageATOSscoreforthisgroupwas2.7,
indicatingthatstudentswerereadingatalevelslightlyabovetheirchronologicalage.However,theaverageAPCof80%suggeststhatwhilestudentsengagewiththesebooks,their
comprehensionskillshaveroomforimprovement.
Thisagegroupalsoshowedasignificantinterestinpicturebooksandearlychapterbooks,whicharecrucialfordevelopingfoundationalliteracyskills.Thedataindicatesthatwhileyoungstudentscantackleslightlychallengingtexts,theircomprehensiononlysometimeskeepsupwiththe
difficultyoftheirchosenbooks.
Thisunderscorestheimportanceofguidedreadingpracticesandtheroleofteachersandparentsinsupportingearlyliteracydevelopment.
MostPopularBooks
ThetopthreebooksforK-2readers—”WeirDo”byAnhDo,“TheBadGuys”byAaronBlabey,and“PigthePug”byBlabey—arepopularduetotheirstronghumour,relatablecharacters,and
engagingvisuals.“WeirDo”captivatesyoungreaderswithitssillyschool-lifesituationsandquirky,exaggeratedcharacters,makingitfunnyandrelatableforkidsjuststartingschool.
The“BadGuys”,ontheotherhand,featuresagroupof"bad"animalswhohumorouslytryto
changetheirways,offeringaction-packedstorytellingthatappealstochildren’ssenseofadventureandhumour.Lastly,“PigthePug”entertainswiththeoutrageousanticsofaselfish,grumpypug,
teachingkidslessonsaboutbehaviourinalaugh-out-loud,funnyway.Thehumourinthesestoriescombinesboldillustrationsandunderlyingmessagesofkindnessandfriendship,makingthem
entertainingandeducationalforyoungreaders.
Title,Author(ATOSlevel,interestlevel)
WeirDo
AnhDo
(3.4/LY5-8)
TheBadGuys
AaronBlabey(2.4/LY5-8)
PigthePug
AaronBlabey(1.7/LY5-8)
8|YearsK-2|WhatKidsAreReading
ResearchAnalysis*
YearsK-2:
EstablishingaStrongReadingFoundation
Whenkidsfirstlearntoread,itissoimportantthattheyregularlyspendtimepracticingthisnew
skill.Amongthemanybenefitsofreading,timespentonthisactivityservesasanindicatorofwordexposure,whichcontributestooverallvocabularygrowth.Howmuchreadingpracticetimeis
enough?Whenwesaydailyreading,wemeanjust15+minutesperday.1
Whyshouldkidsspend15+minutesreadingeachday?
Readingmaylookpassive,butkids
activelymakemeaningwitheach
wordtheyencounter.Researcherscallthisincidentalvocabularylearning,
anditmeansstudentsneedheavy
exposuretobothknownandunknown
2
vocabularytodevelopliteracyskillsandbuildbackgroundknowledge.Wordexposurewhilereadingisinadditiontovocabularylearned
throughinstruction.
Exploringourdata,wefoundthat
cumulativewordexposureby
graduationforseniorswhoreadjust
15+minutesperdaythroughout
gradesK–12peakedat6.8million
words,versusthe1.5millionwords
kidswereexposedtowhenspendinglesstimereading.Forkindergarten
throughgrade2,studentswhoread
for15minutesormoredaily
encounterednearly5timesasmany—wellover200,000more—wordsas
kidswhoreadforlesstime.
1Source:AcceleratedReaderdatabase,2022–2023schoolyear.
TheMoreKidsReadtheMoreThey’llKnow
275,144
wordsencountered
59,071
wordsencountered
Reading<15min/dayReading+15min/day
2Webb,S.(2020).Incidentalvocabularylearning.InS.Webb(Ed.),TheRoutledgehandbookofvocabularystudies(pp.225–239).Routledge.
*breakdownisbasedonUSdata
YearsK-2IWhatKidsAreReadingI9
HowcanIinspiremorestudentstospendenoughtimereading?
OnIy49%ofkidsinyearsK-2readfor
15+minutesperdayIastschooIyear,andinaIIgradescombinedjustoverhaIfof
studentsdidso(51%).Toinspirekidstoputinthetime,considerguidingthemtoscience,technoIogy,engineering,and
math(STEM)topics,whichmayheIpsparktheirnaturaIcuriosityandechoindividuaIinterests.
OurdatashowthatIastschooIyear,haIfofthekindergartnersreadatIeastone
STEMtitIe(49%),andevenmorekidsdidsoinyears1(66%)and2(77%)—on
average,71%fortheearIygrades.With
somanykidstryingoutSTEMbooks,butthiscategoryrepresentsonIy10%of
overaIIreadingintheearIygrades,STEMisanuntappedsourceofreading
inspiration.
Only49%ofkidsinyearsK-2readfor15+minutesperday.
STEMBooksMayActivateReadingMotivation
71%
ofkidstry
STEMbooks
*breakdownisbasedonUSdata
PopularSTEMBooksforK-2
ConsiderthesepopuIarSTEMtitIesandfindothersat.au.
TheVeryImpatientCaterpillar
RossBurach(1.7/LY5-8)
AColorofHisOwn
LeoLionni(2.3/LY5-8)
FromHeadtoToe
EricCarIe
(1.0/LY5-8)
LooseTooth
LoIaM.Schaefer(0.9/LY5-8)
10|Years3-5|WhatKidsAreReading
Years3-5IWhatKidsAreReadingI11
Years3-5
AsAustraIianstudentsprogressintoYears3-5,thereadingIandscapebecomesmorecompIex.
JeffKinneyIs"DiaryofaWimpyKid"seriesdominatedthetopspots,withmuItipIeentriesintheIistofmostpopuIarbooks.ThesestudentswerereadingatanaverageATOSIeveIof5.4,significantIyhigherthanintheK-2group,refIectingincreasedreadingcompIexity.However,theaverageAPCdroppedto80%,indicatingasIightdecIineincomprehensionasstudentsbegantotackIemore
chaIIengingtexts.
ThecontinuedpopuIarityofKinney’sseriesandJ.K.RowIing’s“HarryPotter”bookshighIightstheenduringappeaIofengagingnarrativesthatbIendhumourwithreIatabIecharacters.ThesebooksentertainandprovideopportunitiesforyoungreaderstoexpIoremorecompIexthemesand
Ianguage,essentiaIfordeveIopingadvancedIiteracyskiIIs.
However,thedecIineincomprehensionscoressuggeststhatasstudentsmovetowardsmorechaIIengingmateriaI,theymayrequireadditionaIsupporttograspthecontentfuIIy.
MostPopularBooks
Foryears3to5inAustraIia,booksIike“DiaryofaWimpyKid”byJeffKinney,“HarryPotter”byJ.K.RowIing,and“CharIieandtheChocoIateFactory”byRoaIdDahIarepopuIarfortheirbIendof
humour,adventure,andreIatabIeexperiences.The“DiaryofaWimpyKid”seriesconnectsdeepIywithyoungreadersbydepictingGregHeffIeyIseverydaystruggIesinahumorousIight.TitIesIike“RodrickRuIes”and“CabinFever”highIightfamiIyconfIictsandschooIchaIIenges,whichchiIdrencaneasiIyreIateto,whiIethecomicaIiIIustrationsaddanextraIayerofentertainment.
MeanwhiIe,J.K.RowIing’s“HarryPotter”seriesdrawsreadersintoaworIdofmagicandadventure,with“ThePhiIosopher’sStone”and“TheChamberofSecrets”offeringanimmersiveescapeinto
Hogwarts.Thecombinationofmystery,fantasy,andstrongthemesoffriendshipandcourageresonateswithchiIdren,whofindbothexcitementandpersonaIgrowthinHarryIsjourney.
DiaryofaWimpyKid
JeffKinney
(5.2/MY9-13)
HarryPotterandthePhilosopher’sStone
J.K.RowIing(6.0,MY9-13)
Charlieandthe
ChocolateFactory
RoaIdDahI
(4.8/MY9-13)
12|Years3-5|WhatKidsAreReading
ResearchAnalysis*
Years3-5:
MaintainingReadingMomentum
Afterestablishinga15+minutesperdayreadingroutineforstudentsintheearlyprimary
years,it’simportanttokeepthatmomentumgoingthroughtheupperprimaryyears.Our
datashowthatkidswhoreaddailyforaquarterofanhourormorenotonlyencountermore
1
vocabularybutalsoaremorelikelytoimprovetheiroverallreadingachievement.
Afterlearningtoread,dokidsreallyneedtokeeppractisingthisskilleachday?
Yes.Askidsmovethroughtheirschooling,theytransitionfromlearningtoreadtoalsoreadingtolearn.Kidsstillneedtoactivelypracticereadingtofurtherhonethe
strategies,vocabulary,andbackground
knowledgetheywillcontinuetolearnandusethroughouttheirschoolingandtheirfuturelives.
Makingtimeforthisactivityforjust15+
minutesdailyisstillthekey.Inyears3–5,wefoundthatkidswhobegantheyearbelow
benchmarkinreading(belowthe40th
percentilerank)were10%morelikelytomeetthebenchmarkbyspringontheStarReadingassessmentwhentheyreadfor15+minutesdaily.
AtRiskReadersHittheMarkwith15+minutesperDay
19%
likelytoreachbenchmark
Reading<15min/day
Reading<15min/day
29%
likelytoreachbenchmark
1Source:AcceleratedReaderdatabase,2022–2023schoolyear.
*breakdownisbasedonUSdata
Years3-5|WhatKidsAreReading|13
HowcanIhelptosustainstudents’interestinreading?
Inupperprimary,kidsmovefromearlyreadersandpicturebookstochapterbooksofvaryinglengths.Graphicnovels,withlotsofvisualsandshortbitsoftext,mayespeciallyappealtokidslookingforhigh-interestbooksinanontraditionalformat.
Graphicnovelsillustrateabook’sactioninaunique
waythatmaycapturekids’attentionwhereother
bookshavenot.Forstruggling,reluctant,orresistantreaders,graphicnovelsmaybethekeytounlockingthejoyofindependentreading.Andaskingkidstotryreadingagraphicnovelfor“just15minutes”may
makewhattheyhavetypicallyviewedasanunwieldy“task”moremanageable.
Concernedthatgraphicnovelsmightnotchallenge
studentsinthesamewaysthatnovelsdo?Ourdata
telladifferentstory—graphicnovelsreadlastschoolyearinyears3–5hadsimilarreadinglevelstoall
booksstudentsread(onaverage,3.0versus3.2),andkidsunderstoodgraphicnovelsaswellastraditionalbooks,scoring80%versus81%oncomprehension.
GraphicNovelsStackupWellwith
ConventionalBooks
ATOS
3.2
ATOS
3.0
Kidsunderstoodgraphicnovelsaswellastraditionalbooksscoring80%versus81%oncomprehension.
*breakdownisbasedonUSdata
(6.0/MY9-13)(6.8/MY9-13)
PopularBooksfor3-5
Considerthesepopulartitlesandfindothersat
ww
.au.
HarryPotterandthePhilosopher’sStone
J.K.Rowling
HarryPotterandtheGobletofFire
J.K.Rowling
Matilda
RoaldDahl
(5.0/MY9-13)
Weirdo
AnhDo
(3.4/LGK-3)
14|Years6-8|WhatKidsAreReading
Years6-8|WhatKidsAreReading|15
Years6-8
Intheyears6-8,Australianstudentsexhibiteddiversereadingpreferences,withcontemporaryandclassictitlesappearinginthemost-readlists.J.K.Rowlingremainedpopular,particularlywithtitleslike"HarryPotterandthePhilosopher'sStone"and"TheChamberofSecrets."
TheaverageATOSforthisgroupwas5.5,slightlyhigherthaninYears3-5,buttheaverageAPC
declinedto77%.Thisdropincomprehensionisconcerning,asitsuggeststhatwhilestudents
selectmorechallengingbooks,theymayneedhelpunderstandingthecontent,particularlyastheytransitionintosecondaryeducation.
Thereportalsohighlightsaplateauinreadingdifficultyatthisstage,withmanystudentschoosingtoremainwithinacomfortzoneoffamiliarandbelovedseriesratherthanexploringnewand
potentiallymorechallengingmaterial.Thistrendpointstotheneedforinitiativesthatencouragemiddleschoolstudentstobroadentheirreadinghorizonsandengagewithabroadervarietyofgenresandauthors.
MostPopularBooks
Forstudentsinyears6to8inAustralia,bookslike“HarryPotter”,“DiaryofaWimpyKid”,“TheHungerGames”,and“Wonder”arewidelylovedfortheirmixoffantasy,humour,adventure,andimportantlifelessons.J.K.Rowling's“HarryPotter”seriescaptivateswithitsmagicalworld,
touchingonthemesoffriendship,courage,andgrowingup,whichresonatewithyoungreaders.Meanwhile,“TheHungerGames”bySuzanneCollinsoffersanexciting,fast-paceddystopian
adventureexploringcomplexideasofpower,survival,andrebellionthatappealtoolderkidsseekingmorematurethemes.
“DiaryofaWimpyKid”byJeffKinneyremainsafavouriteduetoitshumoroustakeonthe
awkwardnessofmiddleschoollife,makingitbothrelatableandentertaining.“Wonder”byR.J.Palaciodeliverspowerfulmessagesofempathyandinclusivity,idealforthisagegroup.
HarryPotterandthePhilosopher’sStone
J.K.Rowling(6.0/MY9-13)
DiaryofaWimpyKid
JeffKinney
(5.2/MY,9-13)
TheHungerGames
SuzanneCollins(5.3/MY12+)
16|Years6-8|WhatKidsAreReading
ResearchAnalysis*
Years6-8:
Re-EngagingYouthfulReaders
Eachshoolyear,ourreadingdataechoresearchthatshowskidstypicallyreadthemostbooks
aroundfifthorsixthyears.Manyschoolsweworkwithfindthatreadingpeaksaroundyears5to6,
1
beforestudentstranistionintosecondaryschool.Yet,wealsoknowthatstudentswhoinvestinqualityreadingpractise—readingformoreminuteswithbettercomprehension—experience
significantlygreatergrowthinoverallreadingachievement.
Howdoesdailyreadingbenefitstudentsasotherinterestscompetefortheirtime?
Evenasschedulesfillforbusyyears6-8,dedicatingtimeforreadingisasimportantasever.Takingafew
minutestoreadinthecaronthewaytoaneventortowinddownbefore
bedmaybejustthebreakbusy
tweensandteensneed—time
particularlywellspentasthispracticemayalsocontributetosignificant
achievementgains.
UsingStudentGrowthPercentiles
(SGPs)thatcomparestudentgrowth
withacademicpeersnationwide,we
foundthatkidsinyears6–8whoreadfor15+minutesdaily,whilescoring
85%+ontheirreadingcomprehensionquizzes,scoredanSGPof52onthe
StarReadingassessment,growing
morethankidswhoreadforlesstimeandwithlesscomprehension(<85%)whoearnedanSGPof43.3.
DiscerningReadersPackinMoreGrowth
with15+MinutesperDay
SGP42
SGP
43
Reading15min/day
Scoring85%comprehension
Reading<15min/day
Scoring<85%comprehension
1Cunningham,A.E.,&Stanovich,K.E.(1997).Earlyreadingacquisitionanditsrelationtoreadingexperienceandability10yearslater.DevelopmentalPsychology,33(6),934–945.Cunningham,A.E.,&Stanovich,K.E.(1998).Whatreadingdoesforthemind.AmericanEducator,22(1–2),8–17.
2Source:AcceleratedReaderdatabase,2022–2023schoolyear.
3SGPsrangefrom1–99andareinterpretedlikePercentileRankscores:/R57137.Tolearnmoreaboutstudentgrowthtrends,visit:
/resources/how-kids-are-performing/
.
*breakdownisbasedonUSdata
Years6-8|WhatKidsAreReading|17
HowdoIkeepstudentsengagedinreading?
Guidingstudentstofindabookseriesmaymotivate
middleschoolreaders,asit’softenhardtoresistthenextinstallmentafterbeingdrawninbythefirstsatisfying
read.
Ourdatashowbenefitsforstudentswhoengagein
seriesreading.Kidswithsustainedinterestinaseries
readmorebooksandmorefrequentlythanthosenot
readingseriestitles.Themoreseriesreading,themorebooksread,withthelargestleapfrom23booksreadbystudentsengagedintwoseriestomorethantwicethat—50books—readbykidswhoreadthreeormoreseries.
Studentsengagedinmultiplebookseriesalsoreadfor46minutesdaily,nearlydoublingthe24minutesspentbystudentsreadingnon-seriesbooks.
Studentsengagedin
multiplebookseries
readfor46minutes
daily,nearlydoublingthe24minutesspentbykidsreadingnon-seriesbooks.
KidsHookedonSeriesReadMoreBooksOverall50
books
18
books
16
23books
books
Reading0SeriesReading1SeriesReading2SeriesReading3Series
*breakdownisbasedonUSdata
PopularBookSeriesforYears6-8
Considerthesepopularbooktitlesandfindothersat.au
HarryPotterandthePhilosopher’sStone
J.K.Rowling(6.0/MY9-13)
TheHungerGames
SuzanneCollins(5.3/MY12+)
Once
MorrisGleitzman(4.1/MY12+)
Wonder
R.J.Palacio
(4.8/MY9-13)
18|Years9-12|WhatKidsAreReading
Years9-12IWhatKidsAreReadingI19
Years9-12
ForAustraIianstudentsinYears9-12,thedatareveaIedacontinuedinterestinmodernandcIassicIiterature.TitIessuchas"TheHungerGames"bySuzanneCoIIinsand"AnimaIFarm"byGeorge
OrweIIwereamongthemostpopuIarreads.TheaverageATOSscoreforthisgroupwas5.9,refIectingahigherdifficuItyIeveIthanyoungerstudents.
However,theAPCforthisgroupfurtherdroppedto82%,indicatingthatcomprehensionremainsasignificantchaIIengeasstudentsencountermorecompIexthemesandIanguageintheirreadingmateriaI.
DespitethehigherATOSscores,thisdecIineincomprehensionsuggeststhatoIderstudentsmaybenefitfrommorestructuredsupportindeveIopingcriticaIreadingandanaIyticaIskiIIs.Thedata
indicatesthatwhiIestudentsaredrawntochaIIengingandthought-provokingtexts,theymayneedheIptofuIIyengagewiththenuancedcontent,whichcouIdimpacttheiroveraIIacademic
performanceandreadinessforpost-secondaryeducation.
MostPopularBooks
ForAustraIianstudentsinyears9to12,booksIike“TheHungerGames”bySuzanneCoIIinsandJ.K.RowIingIs“HarryPotter”seriesremainhugeIypopuIarduetotheirengagingpIotsand
reIatabIethemesofadventure,bravery,andidentity.“TheHungerGames”offersagrippingdystopianstorythatpromptsreaderstorefIectonpowerandsurvivaI,whiIe“HarryPotter”
continuestocaptivatewithitsrichfantasyworIdandexpIorationoffriendshipandgrowingup.
AdditionaIIy,“AnimaIFarm”byGeorgeOrweIIand“TheSimpIeGift”byStevenHerrickintroducedeeperthemesIikesocietaIcritiqueandpersonaIgrowth.“AnimaIFarm”critiquespowerand
corruptionthroughaIIegory,makingitathought-provokingreadforoIderstudents,whiIe“The
SimpIeGift”deIvesintothemesofhomeIessnessandkindness,offeringamoreemotionaIand
refIectivenarrative.Thesebooksresonatewithstudents,encouragingthemtothinkcriticaIIyand
refIectonreaI-worIdissues.
TheHungerGames
SuzanneCoIIins(5.3/MY12+)
HarryPotterandtheGobletofFire
J.K.RowIing(6.8/MY9-13)
ShootingStars
BrianFauIkner(4.9/MY9-13)
20|Years9-12|WhatKidsAreReading
ResearchAnalysis*
Years9-12:
RealitiesofHighSchoolReading
Researchers,educators,andparentsaresometimessurprisedandconcernedtoseesecondary
studentsreadingbooksbelowagrade9difficultylevel,butdoescrossingthethresholdintohighschoolmeankidsshouldfocussolelyonhigh-leveltexts?Whileit’struethatsomeofthebooks
studentsencounterwillbewrittenathigherdifficultylevels,suchasclassicsembeddedwithinthecurriculum,inreality,manykidswillselectbookslikethosetoppingpopularbestsellerschartsto
1
readforenjoyment
Howdoesdailyreadingbenefitstudentsasotherinterestscompetefortheirtime?
ExaminingrecentNewYorkTimesBest2
Sellers,wefoundthathighschoolersreadatlevelscomparabletoadults.On
average,thebestsellershadATOS
readinglevelsof5.2withupper-grade
interestlevels,whileourdatashowthat
studentsingrades9–12readatanoveralllevelof4.9ATOSlastschoolyear(about
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