June 2025

 

In this issue: Summer Reading, Writing & Learning / Especially for Teachers / Research, Events & News

Our Summer Backpack: 12 Resources to Get Kids Reading, Writing, and Learning

Keep the Learning Faucet on All Summer (and Why It Matters)

Summer is a welcome break from the pace of the school year. But it’s so important to keep the learning going — to reinforce literacy skills, build background knowledge, and nurture children’s curiosity. Here are some practical, engaging ways to make summer a great time for reading, writing, exploring, thinking, creating, and learning with young kids.

Jumpstart summer learning

14 Ideas for Encouraging Summer Reading 

Find lots of ideas to get kids reading, talking about books, and actively learning this summer in this new blog post from literacy expert Tim Shanahan. 

“Often it is asserted that getting kids to read will make them love it. That certainly was true for me, but the research on these matters is not so sanguine. Sometimes kids just find reading to be difficult, boring, or lonely. I don’t think that problem is solved by sending kids off to read on their own. There is more to it than that. People read not just because they find it pleasurable. They read because they want to know things or because they want to do things that reading enables. They read because of the social connections it allows. As you’ll see, the activities I have recommended tend to have some kind of payoff or social connection. That’s not by accident.”

Read blog post

Summer Writing Ideas for Kids

Give kids a chance to exercise different kinds of writing muscles this summer — from poetry to nature journals to persuasive writing. These engaging writing activities are perfect for at home or as a group activity in summer programs.

Sharpen your pencils!

Tips for Keeping a Writer’s Notebook

Find out why it’s a good idea for young aspiring writers to keep a journal, and get practical tips on journal writing from children’s author and writing coach Mary Amato (The Riot Brothers series). She says: don’t forget to bring a writing journal everywhere you go! Learn more about kids and writing in our video interview with Mary Amato.

Related article: Mary Amato’s Tips for Keeping a Diary

Get writing tips

Nature Journals

Science and math explorations give your growing reader a chance to strengthen observation and writing skills by keeping a special journal to fill with sketches, notes, and graphs. Try these ideas to get children started. (In English and Spanish).

Related video: Nature Journals from our full interview with Melissa Stewart (No Monkeys, No Chocolate)

Observe and write

Become a Tree Trekker!

What “wood” we do without trees? Our newest activity kit is all about connecting kids with the trees in their community. Tree Trekkers gives kids a chance to learn all about trees — their role in the ecosystem and in climate change, their characteristics and life cycles, their many benefits to humans and to other species, the stories they tell us about our history, and how trees, forests, and parks have inspired art, music, and literature. 

Related blog post: Made in the Shade

Learn about trees

Celebrate Our Bug Friends!

June 16-22 is Pollinator Week all across the country. Learn about the crucial role that bees, butterflies, moths, and other pollinators play in our natural world with Bug Buddies. In our free activity kit, you’ll find recommendations for great fiction, nonfiction, and poetry books, videos, apps, and hands-on activities to guide kids’ exploration of insects and their role in sustaining healthy ecosystems and lots of the foods we enjoy around our family table.

Related resource: Learn more about Pollinator Week (Pollinator Partnership)

Explore bugs

We Are Storytellers: Exploring Multicultural Folktales, Fairy Tales and Myths  

Reading and writing go hand in hand. Explore multicultural folktales, fairy tales, and myths through shared read alouds and independent reading. Then try some of the writing, oral storytelling, poetry, mapmaking, and other creative activities featured in our activity guide. You’ll also find video clips from our interviews with award-winning authors including Carmen Agra Deedy (Martina the Beautiful Cockroach), Yuyi Morales (Dreamers), Marilyn Singer (Mirror, Mirror), Tracey Baptiste (The Jumbies), and Jerry Pinkney (Uncle Remus: The Complete Tales).

Explore multicultural tales

Summer Literacy Challenge

For most parents, it’s a challenge to keep kids reading and writing all summer. Dive into these 10 ideas to help make this summer full of fun, creativity, and learning. (In English and Spanish)

Take the challenge

Book Swap for Kids

Consider organizing a book swap for your neighborhood or block. It can be a simple afternoon undertaking, or with more time and effort, a fun event that will become an annual tradition! (In English and Spanish)

Start swapping

Book-nics and Flashlight Reading!

The sense of wonder that nature provides is the same curiosity you want children to bring to a book. There are many simple, fun ways to read and learn together in the great outdoors. Have you ever gone on a book-nic or tried reading aloud under the stars by flashlight?

Get tips

Favorite Books for Kids with Learning and Attention Issues

Discover what kinds of books are especially popular with children who struggle with reading. The recommended books are based on a Reading Rockets survey of parents and educators of children with learning and attention issues, including dyslexia, ADD/ADHD, and autism spectrum disorder. 

Find more great book recommendations in our summer booklists, themed booklists library, and searchable Book Finder database. Then plan weekly trips to the library!

Browse the booklists

Especially for teachers

 

Looking for Videos on How to Teach Reading?

Our sister site, Reading Universe, has lots of professional development resources for literacy teachers, including videos filmed in exemplary classrooms around the country. See great teaching in action on the Reading Universe YouTube channel.

Watch videos

Summer PD: Books We Recommend

Alongside your stack of summer reads (Mysteries? Science fiction? A re-read of a favorite novel?), you might want to add one or more of these excellent books to help build your knowledge about teaching reading and writing.

The Knowledge Gap by Natalie Wexler
Focuses on a long-overlooked issue lying at the heart of what is known as the achievement gap: the failure of most elementary schools, and especially those serving low-income children, to systematically build knowledge of the world.

The Writing Rope by Joan Sedita
Weaves multiple skills and strategies into five fundamentals of a comprehensive writing curriculum: critical thinking, syntax (sentences), text structure, writing craft, and transcription (spelling and handwriting).

Language at the Speed of Sight: How We Read, Why So Many Can't, and What Can Be Done About It by Mark Seidenberg
Cognitive neuroscientist Seidenberg digs deep into the science of reading to reveal the ways human beings learn how to read and process language.

The Art and Science of Teaching Primary Reading by Christopher Such
Offers an introductory guide to the science behind reading and its practical implications for classroom teaching in primary schools.

Reading for Life by Lyn Stone
Bridges the gap between research and practice, translating academic findings into practical suggestions and ready-to-use techniques.

Reading in the Wild: The Book Whisperer’s Keys to Cultivating Lifelong Reading Habits by Donalyn Miller
Advice and strategies on how to develop, encourage and assess key lifelong reading habits, including dedicating time for reading, planning for future reading, and defining oneself as a reader.

Browse books for educators

Research, Events & News

The Effects of Summer Reading on Low-Income Children’s Literacy Achievement From Kindergarten to Grade 8: A Meta-Analysis of Classroom and Home Interventions
Review of Educational Research

Longitudinal trajectories of brain development from infancy to school age and their relationship with literacy development
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

American Library Association Annual Conference
June 26–30, 2025 | Philadelphia, PA

National Book Festival
September 6, 2025 | Washington DC

The Reading League Annual Conference
October 28-10, 2025 | Chicago, IL

International Dyslexia Association Annual Conference
October 23–25, 2025 | Atlanta, GA

What happens to reading comprehension when students focus on the main idea
Hechinger Report

2025 Summer Reading Programs: Kids Earn Free Books, Pizza, and More!
We Are Teachers

An agenda for raising student achievement
Flypaper (Fordham Institute)

Writing as Play: Engaging Elementary Students
International Literacy Association

Nebraska invested in having special education students learn alongside their peers — and is seeing promising results
Hechinger Report

Two New Books Honor Legendary Illustrators James Marshall and Arnold Lobel
Publishers Weekly

Teachers concerned about student literacy rates and want better support
K-12 Dive

In 'Words with Wings and Magic Things,' poetry is beautifully illustrated — and fun!
National Public Radio

How Spelling Bees Can Improve Students’ Reading Skills
Education Week (subscription)

A Happy Meeting

Rain meets dust:
soft, cinnamon kisses.
Quick, noisy courtship,
then marriage: mud.

 

— A poem by Joyce Sidman from Firefly July: A Year of Very Short Poems by Paul B. Janeczko

Reading Rockets is supported in part by the National Education Association.

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About Reading Rockets

Reading Rockets is a national educational service of WETA, the flagship public television and radio station in the nation's capital. The goal of the project is to provide information on how young kids learn to read, why so many struggle, and how caring adults can help. 

Send your questions, comments, or suggestions to info@readingrockets.org. Our mailing address is WETA/Reading Rockets, 2775 S. Quincy St., Arlington, VA 22206. We look forward to hearing from you!

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