Reading Hack Planning your Reading Hack programme What

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Reading Hack Planning your Reading Hack programme

Reading Hack Planning your Reading Hack programme

What is Reading Hack?

What is Reading Hack?

What is a hack? A hack is “a clever solution to a tricky problem.

What is a hack? A hack is “a clever solution to a tricky problem. To hack is to modify or change something in an extraordinary way” [Urban Dictionary definition, 2009]. Examples include Lifehack, Museum Hack and IKEA Hackers which all take something established and remake or redefine it. Young people redefine reading through their involvement with Reading Hack.

How does Reading Hack work? Young people: do hacks in their library or school

How does Reading Hack work? Young people: do hacks in their library or school Share their hacks online and get ideas for new hacks Get skills, badges, prizes and compete with others in the Reading Hack League

Hack reading by doing an activity with reading at its heart Make a Dystopian

Hack reading by doing an activity with reading at its heart Make a Dystopian comic strip Remix the Internet into poetry Run a Manga Night Inspire a child to love reading Create a poetry themed DJ set Turn a book into a song Make a book trailer for a Book Trailer Cinema night Play novel-inspired Minecraft Get more ideas from www. readingagency. org. uk/readinghack

Five things Reading Hack gives libraries • A framework for running existing and new

Five things Reading Hack gives libraries • A framework for running existing and new year round activities and volunteering • An exciting brand online platform to inspire young people • A scheme for incentivising young people • A menu of activities, ideas and campaign hooks that makes reading fun and relevant • A bank of toolkits, resources and training to support our work with young people

Benefits for libraries • Adds value to our work • Helps our staff develop

Benefits for libraries • Adds value to our work • Helps our staff develop skills and confidence • Increases our influence with local partners and organisations • Demonstrates our contribution to key local authority priorities • Supports our ambitions for youth involvement as part of the library sector Universal Offers and Children’s Library Journey.

Reading Hack pathways

Reading Hack pathways

Planning

Planning

 • Put all your ideas on a wall or lay them out on

• Put all your ideas on a wall or lay them out on a table. • Get ready with the post-it notes. • Time to shortlist! Scheduling Short-listing Brainstorming • Brainstorm two lists on sheets of A 4: • Things we are already doing • Things we want to do • Arrange your final ideas into a rough order • Jot down some potential dates Get more ideas from www. readinghack. org. uk (young people) and www. readingagency. org. uk/readingha

Your Reading Hack programme Next Steps • Plan another session to put your ideas

Your Reading Hack programme Next Steps • Plan another session to put your ideas into actio and think about how you can get more young people involved.

Further support • Printed materials including – Reading Hack toolkit, Guide and flyer –

Further support • Printed materials including – Reading Hack toolkit, Guide and flyer – Staff poster • Exclusive lock down area – Resources for getting started and developing Reading Hack – Hack sessions • Reading Hack Network Newsletter – Sharing good practice and new thinking www. readingagency. org. uk/readinghack