My daughter is only 10, and I fought against the schools and the terrible "reading" program they had for her in 1st grade. She's in a GT school now, and they don't have to all read the same book. It's a miracle!
Mmmm. Have you heard of the concept of the "balanced reading program"?
When teaching students to read, teachers are supposed to do several things at the same time:
* provide a piece of text that is slightly above their reading age, to teach skills at point of need. Students might be grouped and use a common text so they can hear others attempt the reading aloud while they follow on, and vice versa.
* model reading by the teacher and other adults, either for enjoyment, enrichment or to explicitly point out decoding strategies.
* provide another piece of text that is slightly below their reading age, to improve confidence, expression and fluency. Such texts might also be used in written or oral comprehension activities.
* permit free choice of texts on topics of the child's interests, for recreational reading (ie. selecting from the school library). Even a book that is seemingly "too hard" will be easier to access if the student already knows the vocabulary of a known topic, or can interpret unknown blocks of text from accompanying photographs, captions, diagrams, labels, etc. For example, a dinosaur book can be equally popular with good and poor readers.
There are very valid reasons for students to "have to all read the same book".
I didn't go into details because I'm sure it would bore the general population. My daughter was bored silly in 1st and 2nd grade. At that age, she need to be taught how to think critically about a book and what the author was trying to say, not about "Curious George" or "the silent e means the vowel says its name". She was placed in a gifted school in 3rd grade. At the beginning of 3rd grade, she tested at a 6th grade reading level for comprehension and writing. At the end of 3rd grade, she tested at a 10th grade level in part to the flexibility of the system. Literature is taught in a group of 5 students, and they democratically choose from a list of about 200 books what they want to read. They then are assigned sections of the book to read before their next meeting. Each group member has to write 3 questions that the other kids have to answer about the text, and the the answer can't be "yes, no, true, or false". The teacher also volunteers a question or two. In this way, they were challenged with books they enjoyed. It became a game to try to stump her peers, so she looked deeper into the meaning of the book and the emotions of the characters.
I understand that the "balanced reading program" you referred to may work wonderfully for most students, but my (short) point was that my daughter isn't a normal student and is finally enjoying what she reads. Please don't take this as a "my kid is so special" brag-this is her reality, and my non-gifted 7 year old is thriving in her regular 1st grade class.