Frank Cottrell-Boyce calls for children’s reading to be treated as a ‘right’, in final laureate lecture
Speaking at the Royal Institution, the author and screenwriter linked falling shared reading rates to poverty, housing insecurity and social mediaFrank Cottrell-Boyce has urged policymakers to treat children’s reading as...
By Emma Loffhagen · The Guardian Culture
Speaking at the Royal Institution, the author and screenwriter linked falling shared reading rates to poverty, housing insecurity and social media Frank Cottrell-Boyce has urged policymakers to treat children’s reading as a “right” rather than a parental duty, warning that Britain is failing to understand the emotional and social value of reading, as new research shows a sharp decline in daily shared reading at home. Speaking at the Royal Institution in his final laureate lecture, The Kids Are Not Alright, the children’s laureate linked falling shared reading rates to poverty, housing insecurity and social media. Continue reading...