Junior Reading Challenge 📚️
Well done to the young men who have signed up so far this year for the Junior Reading Challenge. Those who have read a minimum of four books this term, and had them verified by the librarians, received a morning tea shout courtesy of the Rector this morning.
Congratulations to Mitchell Berry, Daniel Cody, Jason Wah, John Miller, Liam Walkley, Carden Hansen, Toby Sun, Jacob Conwell, Robin Sun, Oliver Roberts, Menachelo Murray, Harlan Maguire, Dante Dickey-Sims, Milo Keenan, Tom Transom, Liam Southern, Oscar Henry, Advait Singh, Luke Tavita, Josh Pati, Ben Sheppard, Logan Owen, Ben Quitiquit, Gan Zhang, Spencer Goodall, Ethan Scott, Eric Diao, Brendan Goodall, Josh Smith and Abhinoor Singh.
Registrations for the Junior Reading Challenge will remain open for the remainder of the year so it's not too late to get involved.
Five ways Aotearoa thrives when people read
Reading for pleasure seems like such a simple pursuit: but it’s also a game charger for our intellects, well-being, and even economically! Read on to learn more.
1. Improved mental wellbeing and stress reduction
Studies have proven that a thirty minute stint reading for pleasure can help decrease physical symptoms of acute stress. This comes across in our own research, too: in 2021, 64% of you identified that you read because it helps you relax and unwind.
2. Greater opportunities
The OECD found in 2002 that reading for pleasure is the single most important indicator of a child's future success - even more powerful than socio-economic background.
3. Keeping us curious
Reading for pleasure keeps us primed for lifelong learning. It helps keeps us curious about new sources of information or using our imaginations: and likewise, is said to stimulate our cognitive performance.
4. Diversifying Aotearoa’s offerings to the world
It might not be the first export we think of, but in 2024, the GDP of the New Zealand arts and creative sector was estimated at $16.3 billion. Books and literature are a significant part of our cultural capital, and we support the whole ecosystem by reading.
5. Learning about others, and about ourselves
People who read literary fiction have been proven to have heightened empathy. Books help us to become a kinder, empathetic nation: and to explore perspectives and worldviews of all Aotearoa’s people.