by Maureen Farrell
This contribution drawing attention to the importance of
reading aloud follows on from something Prue Goodwin talked about in her input on
Margaret Mahy (September 2013) when she reminded us how good Mahy was at
celebrating the power of listening to good books read aloud.
My involvement in the Reading Fictions project has focused on the place of books and reading in young adult fantasy fiction and among the material I’ve focused on is Cornelia Funke’s Inkheart trilogy. In Inkheart, twelve-year-old Meggie discovers that her father Mortimer, a professional bookbinder, has the unusual skill of being able to transfer characters from books into the real world when he reads aloud. Meggie’s father’s ability to read “ almost tenderly, as if every letter were a musical note and any words spoken without love were a discord in the melody” means that even the most hard bitten audience is caught in the thrall of the words on the page. Funke takes the idea further so that the reader in the book has to read the text aloud in such a way that the fantasy is realised not just in the reader’s mind but in reality. Characters are ‘brought into or out of” the books if the passage about them is read aloud.
The importance of reading aloud to children is widely acknowledged both in the
classroom and at home. The
Secret Garden and Alcott’s Little
Women. Then we read War Horse (Morpurgo) and
Theresa Breslin’s Remembrance and
most recently we finished Harper Lee’s classic, To Kill a Mockingbird and both of us found Scout’s first experience
of school and a recently qualified teacher very pertinent. Scout arrives at
school already able to read because she has read everyday with her father
Atticus. The teacher is horrified that Scout (Jean Louise) is able to do this
and says Atticus is not to read with her any more – the implication being she’s
to forget all the ‘bad habits’ she has been taught at home. How the thinking
has changed – one hopes!
Recently however, I have been reflecting on the pleasure
adults get from being read to. My elderly mother, a former primary teacher and
early years specialist, is now in a care home and her eyesight is so bad she
can no longer see to read herself. Consequently I have begun reading aloud to
her (and sometimes an uninvited audience of care staff) and have been struck by
the pleasure she gets from this. We started with Agatha Christie and then some
classics, Frances Hodgeson Burnett’s
Searching around for material to read aloud I came upon a
wonderful organisation called The Reader Organisation http://www.thereader.org.uk/ a
charitable organisation working to connect people with great literature through
shared reading.
Their ‘reading revolution’ targets some of the most
vulnerable and excluded people in our society, including
prisoners and people in secure forensic psychiatric settings, children in care
or excluded from school, and people suffering dementia and severe depression;
as well as company employees, library users, students, parents, people entering
retirement and those at risk of isolation. They do this through their ‘Get into
Reading’ groups which bring people together weekly in read aloud reading
groups. Their website has a wealth of valuable information but the readers
stories have particular impact.
Recently I was working with a
group of one-year secondary English teacher trainees and I used a passage –
actually an advertisement for a Pioneer car Hi Fi system – that reads like a
Gothic horror story. They were not provided with the text and they were asked
to respond to it, generally about whether they were able to identify the
purpose of the piece of writing from the generic features. What was surprising
was that many of their initial responses centred round how much they had
enjoyed being read to and that led on to discussion of the fabulous resources
that the digital age gives us access to through iPods, MP3 players, phones and
so on. I have friends who swear that Stephen Fry reading the Harry Potter books kept them and their
three children fully engrossed when travelling by car from Elgin to London.
Let’s not just keep reading aloud
for the primary classroom or for bedtime stories. Sharing the joy of reading
through reading aloud is a hugely underused and underestimated approach. So,
are you sitting comfortably?.........
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