Author Don Winn Blog

Minimizing Summer Learning Loss

When I was a lad in elementary school, I couldn’t wait for summer vacation. As a dyslexic student, school was my greatest stressor, and that fact only made my longing for summer break more intense. During my carefree summer months, I rode my bike, climbed trees, played ball with friends, went exploring constantly, fished, caught frogs and locusts, and went on a family vacation. The last thing on my mind was reading books; I thought very little about school or the need to maintain what I’d struggled so hard to learn during the school season.

Boy Exploring Long Grass in Summer small

The truth is that all children, dyslexic or not, face an unintended consequence of the summer break from school—a “summer slide” or learning loss.

In 2011, the RAND Corporation published a study demonstrating how students in the United States lose an average of one month’s worth of learning in reading and math skills over the summer. Lower income students may lose up to two months of learning during the summer because they often don’t have as much access to a vacation or other educationally stimulating venues.

Let’s do the math: if the average school year lasts 8 months, and two months of education could be lost each year based on the summer slide statistic, potentially 25% of the school year’s value in critical areas like reading and mathematics simply vanishes—evaporating into thin air. (That is potentially 60 days of getting the kids up, getting them dressed and fed, dealing with homework drama, packing lunches and getting everyone out the door mostly on time…days you probably didn’t want to go through all that hassle, but you did anyway, because that’s what you do…It would be a shame for all that hard work to go to waste, right? Keep reading.)

The educational stakes for children are high, because these educational losses actually compound summer after summer. According to the study, 20% of third-graders in one state could not read at grade level. By the eighth grade, the number of students reading below grade level had increased to 33%. The accumulation of several years’ worth of summer reading loss greatly contributes to these statistics.

The good news is that small efforts to counteract the summer slide bring big returns. If a student reads as few as five books during the summer, it can prevent learning loss in reading skills. What can you do to help your children?

This summer, as each family finds more fun reasons to read, I look forward to hearing from you. Let me know when you read your five books (or your first summer book, or your second…), including audiobooks. Which ones did you read? What did you like about them? Would you recommend them to others? Let’s make this a great summer! Happy Reading!

Other helpful blog articles:

Helping the at-risk reader by fostering the love of story
How heroes of self-reference can help struggling and dyslexic readers

 

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