25% of children in York below reading standards

21 Mar 2022

New figures uncovered by the Liberal Democrats have revealed approximately 25% of 11 year old children in York have a reading age below 11. The research reveals almost 167,960 11 year olds across the country and 489 in York as being below the standard reading age. 

The shocking figures were published recently by the Department for Education in response to a Parliamentary Question tabled by Liberal Democrat Education Spokesperson Munira Wilson.

The latest figures held by the Department are from 2019 as testing was suspended over the pandemic. This means that the numbers are likely even higher after children have faced consistent disruption to their education over the last two years. 

Liberal Democrats in York have urged the Department for Education to:

  • Fund the full £15 billion catch up programme put forward by their own Education Recovery Commissioner
  • Publish any new data they have from during the pandemic. 
  • Commission an urgent review into reading ages across the country.

The research comes as the Liberal Democrats are calling for an extra £10 billion to go towards catch up, including £5 billion to be put directly into the hands of parents as a catch up voucher for every child. The policy was backed by the Liberal Democrats at their Spring Conference this weekend. The voucher could be used to empower parents to help improve their child’s reading age outside of school. 

Responding to these figures, Councillor Ian Cuthbertson, Liberal Democrat Executive Member for Children, Young People and Education, said:

“These figures reveal a reading crisis in our schools and they’re just the tip of the iceberg. The Government must get a grip of this issue by commissioning an urgent review into reading ages for pupils. 

“We know that the pandemic has had a huge effect on our children. Pupils, teachers and parents have not had a fair deal throughout this pandemic. No child should leave primary school unable to read at the standard level for their age - they need a chance to catch up. 

“Local councils are doing all they can in challenging financial circumstances, but it’s time for the Government to act so we do not leave a whole generation behind.”

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