Features Highams Park

Sight-impaired Thomas, seven, takes on fifth book reading challenge

Seven-year-old Thomas Zalba-Smith from Highams Park has nystagmus and is registered as sight impaired, and yet he has already completed the Summer Reading Challenge four times at his local library

(Left image credit: Kimberly Farmer via Unsplash), and (right) Thomas Zalba-Smith, 7, from Highams Park

Thousands of children across the UK will be heading to their local libraries this week to begin the Summer Reading Challenge – the annual readathon organised by The Reading Agency.

The challenge allows children to win rewards after reading books and keeping a summer reading log.

In partnership with The Reading Agency, The Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) is encouraging children with vision impairments to take part in the challenge using books in large print audio and braille from RNIB’s online library.

Seven-year-old Thomas Zalba-Smith from Highams Park has nystagmus and is registered as sight impaired, but his parents say this hasn’t stopped him completing the challenge four times at his local library.

Although he reads standard type, he prefers books like the Tom Gates series where text is broken up into small chunks with doodles between.

Thomas’s mum Helen says: “Tom Gates got him devouring books from beginning to end. Since then, he’s been sitting in the garden reading and sitting in his window reading for hours on end.

“It was an overnight transformation from really resenting having to read at all, to wanting to read independently when we started putting these kinds of books in front of him. Now he’s getting into other types of books because he’s realising what he gets out of that experience.

“I feel like the vision impairment was holding him back from loving reading, but now we’ve found a way that enables him to manage it, it
really is his thing. It’s his escape which is quite miraculous given that he is a by who doesn’t normally sit still for more than five minutes. He will literally read books from cover to cover if we let him.”

Lara Marshall, RNIB’s library engagement manager, said: “The Summer Reading Challenge is a such a positive thing for children with vision impairments and the more people that are aware of it the better. I can’t wait to see what books Thomas reads over the summer.”

Emma Braithwaite, head of skills and engagement at The Reading Agency, said: “Stories like Thomas’s about how finding the right format
transformed him from reluctant reader to book lover reminds us why this partnership matters so much. Every child deserves to discover their love of reading through the Summer Reading Challenge.”

For more information about Summer Reading Challenge events happening in your area, pop into your local library

Find yours via the Summer Reading Challenge website where you can also download resources and activities


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