The Reading Agency’s “Summer Reading Challenge”, which
was taken up by over three quarters of a million children last year, is to
become a Children’s University nationally validated learning activity. This means that this Summer for the first
time all libraries in the British Isles which take part in the Challenge will
become recognised Children’s University ‘Learning Destinations’.
In addition to earning stickers and medals children taking
part in the Summer Reading Challenge who have Children’s University ‘Passports
To Learning’ will be able to get their passports stamped at their local library
and earn up to six hours of Children’s University learning if they complete the
Challenge. They will be able to earn a further four hours if they complete
additional activities organised by local libraries.
Last year, 780,000 children aged 4-11 took up the Summer
Reading Challenge, making it the most successful scheme of its kind in Great
Britain. This year, the Summer Reading Challenge has also been selected to be
part of the London 2012 Festival, the 12-week nationwide celebration running
from 21 June until 9 September 2012 as the culmination of the four-year
Cultural Olympiad.
Students aged 5-14 years can enrol in the Children’s
University through their school and are issued with a ‘Passport To Learning’,
in which they log the number of hours they spend on validated activities.
They are
encouraged to work their way through Bronze, Silver and Gold certificate
schemes. Currently over 2,900 schools
and academies participate in the Children’s University and there are over 1,800
public ‘Learning Destinations’ including museums and galleries as well as “BBC
Visitor Centres”, “Nature Detective Trail”, “Masterchef”, “Museum Club” and
“Junior Journalists”.
Children’s University Validators assure the quality of
each ‘Learning Destination’ using the Children’s University’s own framework
‘Planning for Learning’ developed with Professor John MacBeath of the
University of Cambridge.
Anne Sarrag, Director of The Summer Reading Challenge at
The Reading Agency, announced the partnership saying; “It’s fantastic that the
Children’s University are making the Summer Reading Challenge one of their
activities. This will help us to promote the Summer Reading Challenge to more
children, parents and teachers.
“Our organisations share similar aims in providing high
quality out of hours activities to aid a love of learning voluntarily.”
Ger Graus, Chief Executive of the Children’s University
says: “The Summer Reading Challenge opens up a whole new world for children, a
world of creativity and curiosity, fuelling their imagination and helping them
to develop in a literary and creative sense. This partnership enables children
to be fulfilled during the summer, bridging the gap between school terms and
helping them to achieve their personal goals as they work towards their
certificates.”
The Summer Reading Challenge launches in libraries in
Scotland at the end of June and on 14 July in Libraries in England, Wales and
the Isle of Man. Throughout the regions, libraries will be linking the
Challenge in with events in local arts venues and museums.
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