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Tuesday, 21 December 2010

Government cut funding for Booktrust

Today the news was announced that the Government are cutting the 100% of the funding for Booktrust, the organisation who run the Booked Up programme, which has been giving away a free book to all Year 7 students in the country.

When the sample set of books arrives each year and go on display, they're instantly a hit with our students; not just the Year 7s who will get them, but the upper years as well, who all want to borrow them straight away and are annoyed when we tell them they have to stay on display for longer. Then the order forms go out with the leaflets, and the excitement and buzz this creates is wonderful.  Suddenly a whole year group is talking about books, which ones they'll get, organising in groups of friends to get the whole collection between them.  And these aren't just throw away titles.  This year our three most popular titles were Invisible City by M.G. Harris, the first book of the Joshua Files, Fever Crumb by Philip Pullman, which you'll remember was nominated for the Carnegie medal this year, and Love, Aubrey by Suzanne LaFleur.  These aren't obscure titles from obscure authors, these are exactly the books that our students wanted to read.  The range is always superb, offering non-fiction, poetry, and picture books for those with serious literacy difficulties too.  There really is something for everyone, not even our most reluctant readers could avoid being enthusiastic about choosing their title.

From the day the order forms were collected in, the library was besieged by Year 7 students asking when their books were arriving.  And when they found out they weren't there yet, we were able to tell them about other titles that they might enjoy, based on their choice, and our loan figures took an immediate jump.  Then they were there, in big purple boxes, complete with stickers and bookmarks.  I didn't get to hand them out.  As soon as the students saw the boxes they begged to be allowed to take them to registration for distribution, and for a whole day, every single Year 7 student in the school walked around the campus with a book in their hand or in their pocket.  No one put them in their bags.

What the Government have failed to grasp is that a large proportion of these students do not own books.  Their parents don't own books.  For many of these students, reading and literacy are not valued at home.  These aren't the students whose parents will take them to the library.  Few of them will visit the school library outside of lessons because it just isn't part of their culture to do that.  But now they have a book.  And it's not one that they're being forced to read, it's one that they chose, and it's theirs to keep.  No overdue reminders, nobody waiting to take it back.  It's a gift.  When I handed them out to my form, a Year 7 group that contains a couple of students with serious literacy difficulties, one boy took his in both hands.

"You mean I get to keep it?" he said.

"Yes, it's yours.  A present."

"Wow.  No one's ever given me a book before."

Our school is not in a low income area.  Our proportion of students on free school meals is ridiculously low, average incomes are huge and there are still students, even here, who live in a world where they have never been given a book.  I hate to think what it's like in more disadvantaged areas.

Let's get the figures straight.  The schemes cost the Government £13m.  Quite a lot of money.  But this is used as a basis to raise sponsorship of over £56m.  So what the Government is doing is waving goodbye to over £43m of support for literacy that doesn't even come out of its own pocket.  And they decided to announce this just as the Christmas holidays began.  Well, Merry Christmas to you too, you [insert insults here].

Local councils are cutting library budgets.  Staff hours in our area have been cut by 40% and there are closures happening right across the country.  School budgets are being cut, and school libraries will be on the line as Headteachers are forced to make difficult decisions.  So at a time like this, when a fundamental aspect of every child's education, reading, is under threat, the Government cuts funding for schemes that we know make a difference.  I don't understand what they're aiming for.  An illiterate public?  An absolute division of the haves and the have nots?  And yet today they announce a consultation on tackling child poverty.  It's been widely accepted that the fastest, most effective and most sustainable way of reducing child poverty is through education, so what on earth are they trying to do?

 

11 comments:

  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Ian Clark. Ian Clark said: RT @stormfilled: Blogged: Government axing funding for @Booktrust http://dft.ba/-gits #bookgifting [...]

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  2. I was seriously saddened by the decision to shut down BookStart and BookedUp in England. It's a terribly shortsighted thing to do. Library workers, teachers and parents up and down the country can attest to the strength of the bookgiving programmes.

    For details of cuts in public library provision (including national list and map - around 360 announced so far) see http://publiclibrariesnews.blogspot.com/. For reasons to defend libraries see http://www.voicesforthelibrary.org.uk/wordpress/

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  3. Great post. These sorts of support for reading and literacy are something I happily pay my taxes towards and would pay more for, they are such an investment in our future. I don't understand what the government are aiming for either by doing this - a big bah humbug to the lot of them.

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  4. Dear Librarian, I am a librarian too, care about literacy and books and reading and love what you do for children with the Booktrust. The times are so dire, and getting simply living back on sound footing is desperately important, therefore the cuts that you see. Your Booktrust is so useful, and it would be nice if you could get that set up as a private charity. On a local level, someone, maybe someone who reads your blog or someone who is in your community might start a private fund raising drive for you, or give you a gift of love to purchase books with. You see when people do it for you it is even more meaningful, even more meaningful than when the government does it. One idea is to ask for donated books, have a book sale, and then buy the titles you want for the kids with the proceeds. That is what we do, in Natick, in the United States, to add books to our public library collections. We have also had a program at one of our big bookstore chains, where you could buy a title from a group on display at the checkout to give to a child who registered with the store. I know it will be harder for you, but your job is to say what the need is, and show how the kids appreciate it. And I know for a fact, that they do....

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  5. Hey Ian, thanks for the links - I don't think many have realised quite how dire the situation is, for some areas in particular.

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  6. Thank you! It does seem ridiculous, especially when there are those, like you, who want to support these initiatives.

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  7. Hi Sandy, thanks for your comment. Though I absolutely agree that some cuts will be necessary to sort out the economy, what concerns me is the massive proportion of them that seem to disadvantage the most vulnerable in our society. Child benefit, adjustments to benefits, and those with a more educational focus: cuts to school funding, the abolition of the EMA (Educational Maintenance Allowance which supports those in further education), cuts to libraries and the increase in University fees for students who can expect no extra investment in their education whilst looking at paying back their loans at an ever higher interest rate.

    I think there will be a movement to fund Booktrust as a private charity; certainly that's something that I would work towards, but the timing of the announcement make putting any sort of plan forward very difficult. In terms of your idea to ask for help, as a school library, we already ask for donations, hold book sales and swaps, making good use of Amazon wishlists. We have to do this just so that we can stock the library! Our parents and PTA are very supportive and contribute hundreds of pounds and bags full of books every year to our upkeep. Though our old stock is given to form groups so that every student in the school at least has access to literature, our students value being given ownership of their reading, and being given a choice. Though I'm saddened by the loss of this for my own students, I'm all the more worried for those who don't have what we do, who don't have a school library or a school librarian, or anyone who can even start to coordinate fundraising efforts.

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  8. Although I am in Australia, I became aware of the Booktrust programme when I heard Wendy Cooling speak at a conference. She was so inspiring that I have frequently cited the schemes in talks to parents and teachers as examples of best literacy practice. Sadly I can no longer do so. My heart bleeds for the children who may never own a book of their own with the axing of these programmes. It is unbelievably short sighted. Children are such an easy target for government cuts. I have also blogged my reponse to this disgrace.

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  9. Thanks for your support, glad word of this has spread across the oceans!

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  10. That would be the power of Twitter!

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  11. [...] cut funding for Booktrust [web link]RPS Library (21/Dec/2010)“…and love aubrey by suzanne lafleur these aren’t [...]

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