Abstract

Reading practices play an important role in the learning process of students. Especially in a fast-changing world where knowledge about nature and society is in a constant state of flux, book reading helps students foster skills such as thinking, valuing, adaptability and creativity for sustainable development. This research study used a dataset of 1676 observations of junior high school students from Northern Vietnam to explore students’ academic achievement and its association with their reading passion, family socio economic condition, parental education and occupational aspiration. The empirical results show that higher grades in STEM-related subjects are predicted by reading interest (βReadbook = 0.425, p < 0.0001), with students who love reading books achieve higher score than those who take no interest in books. Remarkably, the education level of the mother strongly enhances academic performance, with β = 0.721 (p < 0.0001) in cases of mother having a university diploma or higher. Students coming from wealthy families are more likely to buy books whereas borrowing from the library is the main source of books for students who grow up in not-rich families. However, even among wealthy families, investment into buying books still rely more on personal interest, despite the aforementioned educational benefits of book reading, as evidenced by an over 7 percentage point disparity between the likelihood of purchasing books among wealthy-family students who took an interest in reading (45%) versus students of the same background who did not like to read (38.7%). The results present implications for education policy making with a vision towards United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal 4: Quality Education.

Highlights

  • Students in different grades must step by step learn to perceive the world by reading books which are mainly categorized as natural science books and social sciences-humanities books and students are more likely to read natural science books once they need to seek supplementary knowledge in the field besides their teacher—created lessons

  • Regarding the correlation between reading interest and academic achievements, our results showed that students who are interested in reading books average higher score of 45-min tests of Math, Physics, Chemistry and Biology (APS45) compared with those who reportedly take no interest in reading

  • Our study revealed an evidence that the education level of fathers and mothers in families is significantly and postively associated with their children’s academic outcome at schools

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Summary

Introduction

Over half a century ago, Nobel laureate economist Gary Becker stated that the driving force for lifting labor productivity lies in education [4]. This is because education raises social aspiration and enables people to work towards the qualitative increase of living standards and life satisfaction. Self-education and lifelong learning in large part concern the skill of reading comprehension. It is a means for acquiring new knowledge and skills through processing information in textual form, via various mediums including, but not limited to, newspapers, books, and technological devices [5]. Reading proficiency has been found to be the predicting factor for academic performance, including Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) subjects, as well as educational attainment at secondary level [13,14]

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