History
Summer reading programs at public libraries in the United States began no later than the 1890s.Bertin, S. (2004). A history of youth summer reading programs in public libraries: A master’s paper for the M.S. in L.S. degree. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Early programs featured how to care for books, reading logs or lists, and focused on older kids and teens. By 1929, summer reading programs were sometimes themed. In the 1940s, professional publications began including prevention of summer reading loss as a goal of summer reading programs. As of 2014, 95% of public libraries in the United States offer a summer reading program. Summer reading programs are common in Canada as well.Features
Two thirds of public libraries host a summer reading program with a theme.School Library Journal. (2019). ''Public Library Summer Programming Survey''. Most summer reading programs offer books, coupons, or bookmarks as incentives for participating. Participants receive those incentives when they achieve a goal. Libraries commonly keep track of the number of participants, time spent reading, or number of books read.See also
* Collaborative Summer Library Program *References
Literacy Summer {{Library-stub