On this page: About the National Data | Methodology | History
About the National Data
Data
Baseline: 58.3 percent of children aged 5 years and under had parents or caregivers who reported that someone in their family read to the child 4 or more days in the past week in 2016-17
Target: 63.2 percent
Methodology
Questions used to obtain the national baseline data
From the 2016 and 2017 National Survey of Children's Health:
Numerator and Denominator:
DURING THE PAST WEEK, how many days did you or other family members read to this child?- 0 days
- 1-3 days
- 4-6 days
- Every day
History
In 2021 the text for this objective was revised to more closely align with the survey question being used. The objective statement was revised from "Increase the proportion of children whose parents read to them at least 4 days per week" to "Increase the proportion of children whose family read to them at least 4 days per week". In the baseline statement 'parents' was revised to 'parents or caregivers', and in the numerator text 'parents' was revised to 'parent or caregiver'. The data displayed, including the baseline and target values were not affected by these changes.
1. Effect size h=0.1 was chosen to correspond with 10% improvement from a baseline of 50%.