Receipts: Trellison Institute FACEBOOK post — Summer reading program participation reduces summer learning loss

publisher: Trellison Institute platform: Facebook policy: trellison.untethered_truth drafted: 2026-04-25T03:29:21.239869 model: router_picked campaign: imls_library_literacy_v1:library_literacy:trellison:social:v1

The post, as published

Summer break is a time for fun, but did you know it can also be a time for learning? Multiple research syntheses reveal that participating in summer reading programs can help reduce summer learning loss. By keeping young minds engaged with books and stories, children can maintain their literacy skills and return to school ready to learn. It's a simple yet powerful way to support lifelong learning! Discover the benefits of summer reading and how it helps bridge the gap between school years. Read the full research: https://trellison.com/research/library-literacy/lit-review #SummerReading #LiteracyForAll

What this post claims

Claim focus: Summer reading program participation reduces summer learning loss

Audience: civic_stakeholder

Evidence — every claim is traceable

Evidence base

Every claim in this post is paraphrased from the following public-domain federal research. Click through to the original source.

Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Kindergarten Class (ECLS-K)

National Center for Education Statistics · 2011 · License: us_government_public_domain

U.S. Department of Education / NCES

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Child Reading Literacy and the Role of Public Libraries: A Review of Secondary Sources

Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) · 2026 · License: us_government_public_domain

Mathematica Policy Research

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Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Birth Cohort (ECLS-B)

National Center for Education Statistics · 2010 · License: us_government_public_domain

U.S. Department of Education / NCES

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What Works Clearinghouse — Early Literacy Practice Guides

U.S. Department of Education / IES · 2024 · License: us_government_public_domain

Institute of Education Sciences

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Office of English Language Acquisition — Family Engagement & Bilingual Literacy Resources

U.S. Department of Education · 2024 · License: us_government_public_domain

U.S. Department of Education / OELA

View full source →

Editorial policy compliance

This post was drafted under Trellison content is untethered to any single source.

Trellison's authority comes from independence. We synthesize across the full evidence base — ECLS-B, ECLS-K, WWC, OELA, IMLS/Mathematica, peer-reviewed literature — and never let any single grant evaluation, institution, journal, or article carry the message in its own voice. Song lyrics, video narration, and on-screen text in Trellison content do not name-check a single source. End-card citations and metadata link the work to its evidence trail; the body stays about the universally observable truth: caregivers + reading + libraries + early years + the five ECRR practices.

Policy rules applied:

Quality gates passed: gate.format_compliance, gate.untethered_truth, gate.below_threshold_series_frame

Linked artifacts

Roast-proof guarantee. Every factual statement in the post above is paraphrased from at least one federally-paid public-domain source listed in the "Evidence" section. We paraphrase because our editorial policy forbids body-level name-checks — attribution lives here, on the receipts page. If you find a claim you believe is unsupported, reply with the specific sentence and we will either cite it to a source in this page or retract it publicly.