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Craft Chat Audiobook are also literacy

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Pamela Jo

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Oct 26, 2021
Location
Wexford, Ireland
LitBits
18
The National Literacy Trust (NLT) has highlighted the “urgent need to

broaden our understanding of literacy in the digital age” in a new paper

titled The Future of Literacy: Multimodal Reading.

The paper, supported by Audible and Oxford University Press, warns that

the gap between what literacy encompasses in practice and what education,

policy and community systems are equipped to support is widening, and

calls for reading across print, digital, audio and visual mediums to “be

validated in homes, schools, businesses and communities, to ensure that no

child or young person is left behind”.

Jonathan Douglas CBE, chief executive officer of the NLT, said: “Literacy

today goes beyond printed books and writing with pen and paper – it

encompasses digital reading, audio storytelling, visual narratives and

interactive media.

“Our task is not to defend one tradition over another but to recognise literacy

as a living, evolving practice and to ensure that every child can flourish as a

reader in the literacies of tomorrow – whatever the format. Fundamental to

this will be equipping teachers with the skills and resources to confidently

embed multimodal reading in the classroom.

“As we approach the National Year of Reading in 2026, we have a once-in-

a-generation opportunity to bring families, educators, policymakers,

charities, libraries, publishers and businesses together to reimagine reading,

shape the future of literacy and enable our young people – and society – to

thrive.”

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Aisha Glover, global head of urban innovation at Audible, said: “Audio and

other non-traditional reading formats create more pathways to literacy,

particularly for youth who struggle with text-based learning. At Audible, we

believe that by leveraging the power of audio storytelling, we can play a

crucial role in expanding literacy by improving comprehension, motivation

and fluency for the next generation as they imagine new possibilities for

their futures.”

The paper echoes calls from Reading Agency founder and director Debbie

Hicks, who previously told The Bookseller “the definitions we’re using to

classify readers are of a different age”. “If you ask somebody if they’re a

reader, and they listen to audiobooks, or they play video games or they read

comics, they’d probably say no,” she said.

14th November 2025

In this week's issue:

The future of literacy: Multimodal Reading paper, states: “Multimodal

reading is not a threat to traditional literacy but a broadening of it. Print,

Editor's Comment: Editor's Comment: Editor's Comment: Editor's Comment: We pay

leaders to lead, not take a back

digital, audio and visual forms each bring unique strengths. When homes

seat

validate everyday literacies, when schools embed them into pedagogy and

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when communities guarantee equitable access, children and young people

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“This integration offers more than skill development. It builds confidence,

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widens participation, supports wellbeing and prepares children and young

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people to navigate a world where reading is woven across platforms,

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media and contexts.”

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It continues that a joined-up literacy strategy would ensure families are

supported with resources, reassurance and access to diverse reading formats,

schools are equipped with curriculum reform, teacher training and balanced

pedagogies that integrate print, digital, audio and visual texts, and that

libraries and communities act as hubs of access, inclusion and cultural

celebration.

READ IN FULL

“The world is changing. Print is vital, but alone it is not enough,” the paper

concludes. “We must keep pace with technological change, societal shifts

and emerging trends in literacy to ensure that the next generation can

thrive.”

The full report, the first in the National Literacy Trust’s Future of Literacy
 
Thanks for sharing. I think this is really important. We all learn in different ways. As an audio learner myself, I really welcome this.
 

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