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Library Summer Reading Programs

ALA Library Fact Sheet 17

Summer reading programs began in the 1890s as a way to encourage school children, particularly those in urban areas and not needed for farm work, to read during their summer vacation, use the library and develop the habit of reading.

Themes | Grants | Benefits | Research


   Themes

The American Library Association does not set the themes for summer reading programs held at many public libraries nationwide. These may be set by the individual library or by the state library. Many individual or state libraries use the themes set by the Collaborative Summer Library Program (CSLP), a grassroots consortium of states working together to provide high-quality summer reading program materials for children at the lowest cost possible for their public libraries.


   Grants

The value of reading throughout the long summer vacation is recognized by the ALSC/BWI Reading Program Grant which is designed to encourage reading programs for children in a public library by providing financial assistance of $3,000, while recognizing ALSC members for outstanding program development. It is sponsored by BWI (Book Wholesalers, Inc.), and administered by the Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC, a division of ALA). Applications are due by December 1 of each year in support of a program the next summer.


   Benefits

The benefits to readers in a summer reading program include:
  • encouragement that reading become a lifelong habit
  • reluctant readers can be drawn in by the activities
  • reading over the summer helps children keep their skills up
  • the program can generate interest in the library and books

And it being summer, the program can just be good fun and provide an opportunity for family time.

Talking points for the benefits of summer reading, Why Public Library Summer Reading Programs Are Important (PDF), have been made available by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction. A more comprehensive look on the topic, along with a bibliography, can be found on their web site at Research on the Importance of Summer Library Programs.

There are also public relations benefits of attracting new readers, maintaining or building a library presence in the community, and keeping or building traffic for the library. Over the years, many libraries have entered their summer reading program into the John Cotton Dana Library Public Relations Award, co-sponsored by The H.W. Wilson Company and ALA's Library Leadership and Management Association (LLAMA, a division of the American Library Association). For additional information on the public relations benefits of summer reading programs, please see the Public Relations page on the ALA Professional Tips Wiki.


   Research

View a brief list of additonal resources at the Summer Reading Programs page at the ALA Professional Tips Wiki.


Last updated: June 2009 (first edition)


For more information on this or other fact sheets, contact the ALA Library Reference Desk by telephone: 800-545-2433, extension 2153; fax: 312-280-3255; e-mail: library@ala.org; or regular mail: ALA Library, American Library Association, 50 East Huron Street, Chicago, IL 60611-2795.