Impact of 30 Minutes of Daily Reading
By Mrs. Sasha Owusu, Grade 6 ELA Teacher/Grade 6 Grade Level Leader
The Case for 30 Minutes
Read every night for 30 minutes. As a student or parent, you have likely been hearing this for years, yet that 30 minutes seems more elusive with each passing year. Your schedule becomes packed with ECAs, sports, after-school music and dance classes, and other commitments. Where can you find 30 minutes in a super packed day? I get it. As a parent myself, I struggle to find the time to read to my toddler every night — but when I do, watching him point to things and look at a book we have read over and over with fresh eyes each time brings me unmatched joy. That joy is exactly why I keep coming back to the same answer every time a parent sits across from me and asks: what can my child do to improve their English? This could just as easily be rephrased as: what can my child do to improve their vocabulary, their grammar, their writing? My answer is always the same — they need to read.

Independent reading has benefits that reach far beyond reading itself. Want your child to be a better reader? They should read. Want them to use richer vocabulary in their written and spoken language? They should read. Want them to write coherent, complex sentences and use multiple craft moves in their writing? They should read. I know this can sound almost too simple. Surely there must be an app, a worksheet, a tutoring program that accelerates things. And while those tools have their place, none of them replicate what happens inside a child's brain when they spend sustained time inside a book they have chosen and care about.
The research backs this up clearly. Students who read 30 minutes a night encounter over 4 million words per year — words that become part of how they think, write, and speak. Reading volume is the single strongest predictor of vocabulary growth in school-age children, outperforming direct instruction and workbook practice. Students who read widely develop stronger comprehension, better grammar, and more sophisticated writing — not because those skills were taught in isolation, but because they were absorbed through exposure to good writing over time. A child who reads consistently through middle school arrives at high school with a vocabulary six years ahead of a peer who rarely reads independently.

So where does the time come from? The honest answer is that it has to replace something — ten minutes less on a device, a slightly earlier start to the evening. Before bed is the most natural fit, and even 20 minutes after the evening routine winds down adds up to nearly 10 hours a month. Car rides, waiting rooms, the commute to school all count too. It does not have to be perfect, and it does not have to be 30 minutes all at once. Find your family's version of it and protect that time as best you can. The habit matters more than the conditions.
Let your child choose the book; a student who loves what they are reading will actually read it. If they are stuck, bored, or between books, reach out to your child's ELA teacher or the librarian. Helping your child find the right book is one of the most important things we can do together, and we are always happy to help.
