The Premiers’ Reading Challenge is off and running for another year, as premier Jacinta Allan urges kids to get their head in the books.
“From toddlers to teenagers, the Premiers’ Reading Challenge is about reading as many different types of books as possible – instilling a love of reading into every Victorian child,” Ms Allan said.
The challenge encourages students between early childhood and Year 10 to read a set number of books during the year, with their efforts recorded online. A book list recommends age-appropriate texts that children might like to try, but any book counts towards their Challenge totals.
Last year, Victorian kids read 3.4 million books between them – so this year’s Challenge sets an even higher goal of 3.5 million books, encouraging children to become voracious readers across different genres, authors and styles of literature.
This year’s ‘Explore, Learn, Enjoy’ theme captures the excitement and sense of adventure that reading gives us all – and the theme is also reflected in the Prep Bags given to every new student at a Victorian government school, which also includes a range of carefully chosen books and educational play materials.
Children who have not yet started school are also encouraged to join the Challenge by reading 40 books with the help of their families – with picture books, short stories, poems or non-fiction books in any language all eligible for the Challenge.
In 2013, the Challenge was expanded to include young children from birth to five, following strong evidence indicating that reading to young children from birth promotes brain development and language learning.
Since the Challenge began in 2005, 4.3 million students across Victoria have read more than 60 million books. Victorian students are the strongest performers in the country for the all-important Year 3 Reading NAPLAN results.
Full book list: vic.gov.au/premiers-reading-challenge.