Schools North East Logo

News

More than 770,000 UK children ‘don’t have any books of their own’

Children without books are 15 times less likely to be good readers than their book-owning peers, research shows.
 

More than 750,000 UK schoolchildren do not have  a single book of their own, a new survey suggests.

These children are four times more likely than their book-owning peers to be below the expected standard in reading for their age.

The National Literacy Trust surveyed more than 42,000 children between the ages of 8 and 18. It found that 9.4 per cent did not have any books of their own at home.

Extrapolating these figures out to all children in the country between these ages, this would equate to 770,139 children nationally who did not own any books.

Read the full article on the Tes.

Latest News

02
May

School readiness in the North East: Why it matters more than ever

Over the Easter break, we were invited to share our insights with the BBC…

Read story
02
May

Beyond Inclusion: Transforming SEND Support Post-Pandemic with BBCET

In the latest episode of The Schools North East Podcast, we hear from Nicola…

Read story
02
May

West View Primary School embrace exciting new art initiative

Pupils at West View Primary School in Hartlepool have been embracing their creativity as…

Read story