This article has been updated to reflect 2026 data and recent developments.
There has been a substantial decline in the number of children who read for pleasure in the last few years. According to recent editions of Scholastic’s Kids & Family Reading Report, reading for fun has declined over the past several years. Today, only about half of children in the United States report enjoying reading for fun. A full 37% of children like to read “a little,” while 12% report not liking reading at all.
When it comes to reading, kids can come up with a million excuses as to why they don’t like it. It’s boring. There isn’t enough time. It isn’t fun. There’s already too much reading in school.
Thankfully, there is an art to promoting reading. Some methods, like nagging, definitely do not work. Yet other methods, such as modeling reading behaviors to your child, will pay dividends in the short and long term.
What NOT To Do
It can be frustrating trying to get your child to read, and in those moments, it is easy to rely on unsuccessful methods for encouraging reading. Sometimes the first inclination is to nag your child into submission, or perhaps bribe them to read by offering them a reward for doing so. Unfortunately, these methods often do more harm than good. Nagging can easily wear on your child’s nerves and lead him or her to resent the fact that they are being forced to read.
