Children’s voluntary summer reading in Norway: Insights gained from the gamified library-initiated reading campaign Sommerles.no

Using gamification, the Norwegian library-initiated summer reading program Sommerles.no (lit: Summer reading.no) entices one-fifth of Norway’s primary school students to read for pleasure during their summer vacation. The current paper explores the characteristics of the 105,319 participants of the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nordic Journal of Literacy Research
Main Authors: Lidun Hareide, Eivind Tveter, Silje Ims Lied
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Norwegian Bokmål
Norwegian Nynorsk
Swedish
Published: Cappelen Damm Akademisk NOASP 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.23865/njlr.v6.2052
https://doaj.org/article/0ea60f5033c7442a9d5b3bee2eda12ed
Description
Summary:Using gamification, the Norwegian library-initiated summer reading program Sommerles.no (lit: Summer reading.no) entices one-fifth of Norway’s primary school students to read for pleasure during their summer vacation. The current paper explores the characteristics of the 105,319 participants of the 2018 edition of Sommerles.no. This analysis demonstrates that the campaign is a success in terms of overall participation and, especially, in terms of the share of boys who participated (43%). However, the participation of children who speak Sámi and non-Western European languages at home is under-represented. Children who speak Russian or other Western-European languages than Norwegian at home have the highest registered number of pages read, whereas children from non-Western European language backgrounds read fewer pages. As reading for pleasure during the summer most probably represents the most effective strategy for the groups with weak reading capabilities, the reading campaign has the potential to increase participation by these weak groups further.