Late in May, I always challenge my middle school students to
keep reading during the summer. I
usually use the obvious but understandable “use it or lose it” allegory. It goes like this:
Me: What happens to an athlete if, at the end of the season, he or she goes home and crashes on the couch for three months? How will their body respond when they are ready to start practicing and playing again?Students: They’ll be fat. They’ll be slow. They will lose strength, speed, flexibility, skills, etc.Me: What do you think happens if you go home for the summer, sit on the couch, and don’t read? What do you think happens to your reading skills?
Okay – it may be a
little overused, but when I tie it to a contest, ask students to send me photos
of themselves reading in unusual places this summer, and add a goal of reaching
a combined million pages with the other two middle schools in our district, I
usually get pretty good results. Students and faculty members at our school
were asked to keep a reading log this summer, recording titles and numbers of
pages read. I encouraged my students to set a reading goal
as well, and to post that goal on Edmodo and let us know how they were doing
during the summer. I pledged to read 100
books this summer, from June 1 – August 31.
While there were some scoffers, a few students announced their intent to
either keep up with me, or surpass my goal.
I really hope they do!
In May, a friend sent me this post from Donalyn Miller, The Book Whisperer, challenging her readers to participate in
summer reading by pledging to read a book a day.
Excellent! I’m in! I checked to be sure I could still remember
my Twitter account password, since I had not made a post since July of 2011,
and began posting my reading to #bookaday, Goodreads, and my reading log.
Then another friend sent me a post from Sherry
Heise, from Heise Reads and Recommends, launching the 2012 Summer Throw Down, a
friendly competition to see who could average the most books read during the
first round, June 18 – July 17, librarians or teachers.
While not a competitive person, the opportunity to expand my
Twitterverse and add a Twibbon to my blog inspired me to sign on. The result of both of these challenges is
that I have found an enormous
community of readers, reviewers, authors and book lovers by following
#summerthrowdown and #bookaday. Another gift from an increased reading diet has been the
resurrected Twitter account, which has provided SO MUCH MORE than a community of
bibliophiles, but that is for another post.
Part Two of the 2012 Summer Throw Down starts on Sunday, July 22. If you are a teacher or librarian, why not join us for an incentive to end your summer with a head full of books and a heart ready to recommend them? Check in at Heise Reads and Recommends to find out how to participate.
:) I've loved the Summer Throwdown and it has motivated me to read faster than I normally would. Can't wait to see if we reach our district goal.
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