Home / Half of parents do not read daily to pre-school age children
Half of parents do not read daily to pre-school age children
EB News: 24/10/2024 - 14:13
The National Literacy Trust has found that half of parents do not read daily to children of pre-school age, which has gone down since 2019.
The research asked parents of early years children aged from birth to five how often they were taking part in key learning activities with their child, including: reading, chatting, playing, singing, painting and drawing, playing outside, engaging in digital learning activities, visiting the library and group activities that support language development.
It found that one in two (50.5%) parents said they had read with their child daily in 2024, a decrease of 15.1pp compared with 2019, when two in three (66.1%) said they had done this.
Four in five (78.1%) of parents said they had chatted to their child at least once a day in the last week, a decrease of 12.2 percentage points(pp) compared with 2019, when 9 in 10 (90.3%) said they had done this
One in two (56.0%) parents told us that they had played together with their child at least once a day in the last week. This compares with 3 in 4 (76.2%) who reported playing with their child daily in 2019, a decrease of 20.2pp
Around 1 in 2 parents reported singing with their child (47.5%) daily or more often, while 1 in 3 engaged their children with digital learning activities (34.5%) and played outdoors (33.3%) daily.
Most parents reported there being children’s books, whether owned or borrowed, at home. However, almost 1 in 4 (22.5%) parents said there were fewer than 10 children’s books at home
Three in 4 (74.3%) parents said they had visited the library as a family at least once in the last month, demonstrating the importance of this resource for families with young children. However, 1 in 5 (19.5%) said they had not been to the library with their child at all during this time.
The National Literacy Trust's 'Early Words Matter' campaign is working to support 250,000 pre-school children, with a focus on those growing up in areas of financial disadvantage, to support early years educators and families with events, activities and resources designed to support shared parent-child engagement inside and outside the home.
James Bowen, assistant general secretary at school leaders’ union NAHT, said: “One of the most important things a parent can do to support their child’s education is to read with them at home. An early love for books and reading can have a huge long-term impact. It is therefore concerning to see suggestions that parents are reading to their children less frequently than previously.
“There are undoubtedly huge pressures on families currently and cuts to community services and local libraries certainly have not helped either.
“We should be doing everything we can to encourage parents to read with their children as often as possible – just five minutes a day can make a real difference.”
The government has developed a child-friendly version of its Child Poverty Strategy, which can be used by teachers to have important conversations with children about the challenges facing families in poverty.
An extra £40.5 million of funding has been allocated to support essential capital repairs and maintenance across schools, colleges and universities in Wales.
Education Business LIVE 2026 will feature a session from NASBTT on how teacher training programmes can build trainees’ knowledge, attitudes and essential soft skills.
An Ofsted report finds the challenges schools face in supporting children in care are mainly due to inconsistencies in local authority practice, unclear national expectations, and a lack of training for staff.
The new measures will help universities meet their Prevent Duty, while the Office for Students will strengthen how it monitors whether universities are meeting Prevent responsibilities.