Pupils’ enjoyment of writing reaches record low

New report warns that only a third of children and young people say they find pleasure in writing
23rd June 2021, 9:56am

Share

Pupils’ enjoyment of writing reaches record low

https://www.tes.com/magazine/teaching-learning/general/pupils-enjoyment-writing-reaches-record-low
A New Survey Shows That Enjoyment In Writing Among Children & Young People Is At A Record Low.

The proportion of young people who enjoy writing has fallen to a record low, a charity survey suggests.

Only around a third (34.5 per cent) of children and young people said they find pleasure from writing, compared to two in five (39.8 per cent) last year, according to a National Literacy Trust (NLT) report.

This is the lowest level of writing enjoyment recorded by the charity since the question was first asked in 2010.


Feature: ‘Writing is hard. Pupils deserve honesty about that’

Technology: ‘How my pupils writing struggles were transformed’

Literacy: Three things parents and schools should focus on


The research, based on a survey of more than 40,000 children aged eight to 18 in 2021, also found only one in seven (15.2 per cent) children and young people said they wrote something in their spare time every day.

This is down 6.3 percentage points from 2020, when more than one in five (21.5 per cent) children and young people said they wrote daily. It also represents the lowest daily writing rate in the past 11 years.

But the NLT report found that nearly two in five (38.3 per cent) young people agreed that writing makes them feel better, with some choosing to write to cope with anxiety or to stay in contact with people.

The survey suggests that more girls than boys enjoy writing in their free time, with two in five girls saying this compared with one in four boys.

Writing enjoyment also declines with age, with nearly twice as many five- to eight-year-olds saying that they enjoy writing compared with those aged 16 and over.

The report concludes: “The pandemic in 2020, its associated lockdowns and school closures have not only interrupted children and young people’s schooling but also appear to have had a negative impact on their writing.

“While we cannot say with certainty that the findings outlined in this report are the direct result of the pandemic and related disruption, the percentage of children and young people enjoying writing is the lowest we have seen in over a decade.”

However, the research also showed a rise in certain formats being written digitally, with more young people writing song lyrics, diary entries, reviews, stories and poems on screen compared with 2020.

The most popular writing that children and young people do in their free time is text/direct messages (92.4 per cent) followed by in-game communications (84.2 per cent), the report says.

Jonathan Douglas, chief executive of the NLT, said: “The past year has been extraordinarily turbulent, and the record lows in writing and writing enjoyment, unfortunately, come as little surprise.

“I’m cheered to see many children, particularly girls, are still finding pleasure in writing, and I hope next year’s data shows a marked uptick across children and young people from all backgrounds.

“We know that creative writing has the wonderful ability to boost children and young people’s wellbeing and help them feel connected to the world.

“It presents a huge opportunity for teachers, educators and parents to encourage writing in all its forms, from putting pen to paper to in-app messaging. It all has a proven benefit to the way a child feels.

“After such a difficult 16 months, encouraging positive behaviours around writing is more important than ever.”

A total of 42,502 children aged eight to 18 in the UK were surveyed between January and mid March.

You need a Tes subscription to read this article

Subscribe now to read this article and get other subscriber-only content:

  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters

Already a subscriber? Log in

You need a subscription to read this article

Subscribe now to read this article and get other subscriber-only content, including:

  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters

topics in this article

Recent
Most read
Most shared