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“More than a grocery store”

We were honored to attend the grand opening of Miss Ruby’s Corner Market on Charleston’s West Side just before Thanksgiving break. Former Read Aloud WV state board member Dural Miller and his community organization opened a grocery store and deli in their neighborhood to fight food insecurity.

As childhood literacy is one of Dural’s strongest passions, he invited us to set up a small free library in the market for kids to take a book home whenever they visit.

“More than a grocery store” is the mantra Dural and his team at Keep Your Faith Corporation have adopted. Beyond serving fresh, locally grown food to their neighborhood, Miss Ruby’s hopes to hold story times and foster other kinds of community engagement.

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Read Aloud goes full circle in Jackson County

At an in-person New Reader Orientation in Jackson County in September, one of our new volunteers approached Chapter President Janet McCauley and said, “You probably don’t remember me, but you taught me how to read 30 years ago.

“You were my first-grade teacher,” new volunteer Kyle Smith said. “I had planned to do the online training but when I saw that it was you doing the training, I had to come see you!”

Who knew 30 years ago that Mrs. McCauley was not only inspiring her students to learn to read and love to read, but she was also building a foundation for a future Read Aloud volunteer?

“What we do today truly does impact the future,” Janet said.

Thank you to Janet, Kyle, and the rest of Jackson County’s hardworking volunteer crew!

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One baby books leads to something more in Putnam County

Elizabeth Ochoa, store manager at Teays Valley Starbucks, has nominated Read Aloud WV for the Starbucks Neighborhood Grant for the past two years. Each year we’ve been awarded $1,000. Elizabeth told us her personal Read Aloud WV experience that led her to champion our cause:

“I grew up in rural WV and, as a child, reading was the only way I could explore the world outside of my community. Reading is the best way for the children of WV to explore and learn and imagine things that they’d otherwise not experience,” Elizabeth said.

”Read Aloud WV strives to foster a love of reading from birth, to motivate a want to read. My youngest child benefited from this program. They partner with CAMC Women and Children’s hospital to donate books to babies born there, including my baby.”

Thanks to Elizabeth and Starbucks, hundreds of WV schoolchildren will take home new books to keep this year. We appreciate you and everything you do for our state’s young readers!
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Read Aloud WV celebrates success in first year of Book Bundles program

In 11 schools this year, Read Aloud WV tried a new program we’ve become really excited about. We distributed “Book Bundles” on a child’s favorite subject primarily to elementary school students. Each bundle contains five books on a subject the student choose earlier. These ranged from basketball, to pets, dance, reptiles, sharks, and more. This research-informed method motivates children to WANT to read, because motivation is the first step in developing any skill. Book Bundles help grow a child’s background knowledge and drives reading comprehension. 

Students build fluency and confidence as they comb through their easier books. Knowledge gained there helps them to read more difficult books. Reading multiple texts on the same subject increases reading proficiency four times faster than other methods, according to the WV Department of Education. Book Bundles also build anticipation around reading. Even some of our most seasoned volunteers were even impressed by the level of excitement in the classrooms on unwrapping day.

More than 2,000 books were distributed through Book Bundles this past school year. We will be distributing more Book Bundles this coming school year based on the program’s success. Classrooms that are enrolled with Read Aloud WV are eligible to receive Book Bundles and other book distributions.

A special thanks to our funders for this program: the Bernard McDonough Foundation, the Dollar General Literacy Foundation, and the Arthur and Joan Weisberg Family Foundation.

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Thanks to everyone who attended Read-A-Palooza 2024!

It was a special night in April looking toward the future of Read Aloud WV and celebrating the accomplishments of our volunteers statewide. We want to thank our sponsors, supporters, volunteers, and community for continuing to champion our work here at Read Aloud WV.

We were honored to recognize one volunteer reader: Delilah Willis, and her parents Deanna and Mike. The Willis family drove from Berkeley County the day of the event to attend. Delilah, who is blind, is a volunteer reader for 3rd graders at Bunker Hill Elementary School, where she reads to her students in Braille.

Delilah reminds us of the importance of reading aloud. She shares a love for children’s literacy and shows the commitment volunteers make for their students. We are so appreciative of Delilah for being a classroom reader, and for making the long trip from Kearneysville to Charleston!

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Books and Baseball in the Capital City

Read Aloud WV and the Charleston Dirty Birds partnered in May to send hundreds of young readers home with a new book to enjoy this summer as they headed  into break. They also witnessed an extra-innings walk-off win by the Dirty Birds!

It was an exciting experience for everyone. We want to thank the Dirty Birds for their commitment to our community and helping grow childhood literacy in West Virginia.

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Get your Read-A-Palooza 2024 Tickets!

It’s time for Read-A-Palooza! We will be hosting our annual fundraiser at the University of Charleston on Thursday, April 18, from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. We’ll be recognizing our wonderful volunteers and looking toward the future of Read Aloud!

Tom Heywood, a partner at Bowles Rice, led our organization in a strategic planning session last fall. He will speak at 6:30 p.m. about Read Aloud’s future work to improve literacy in West Virginia.

The event will feature appetizers and drinks in a casual environment with a happy hour feel, as well as a fun and popular “wine pull.” For $20, participants can pull a mystery bottle of wine. All bottles are worth $20 or more.

Read-A-Palooza tickets are $45 prior or $50 at the door. They can be purchased at this link: https://checkout.square.site/merchant/0VBE4K1RS7H9J/checkout/J65RME3CPZ5HR2JV2L7NJXQJ

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An evening with Marion County Literacy Volunteers …. and Ozzie The Reading Dog!

Literacy Volunteers of Marion County invited Read Aloud WV to visit in March. Thirteen Literacy Volunteers — and their dog Ozzie, pictured here with volunteer Pam Shanholtz — attended an orientation to qualify as Read Aloud volunteers. Literacy Volunteers tutor students and adults in reading, loan books to readers, and distribute books to families in Marion County.
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Training the Next Generation of Read Aloud Volunteers

Jackson County Read Aloud President Janet McCauley recently delivered an in-person New Reader Orientation to these students at Roane-Jackson Technical High Center.

“What a delightful group!” said McCauley. “One gal related to me how the training impacted her thoughts about screen time. She also told of observing a football player who was reading to an elementary class and told him how he could improve! I was thrilled to know that this training made such an impact on at least one person.” 

This winter, Read Aloud also conducted virtual New Reader Orientations for students at Independence High School in Raleigh County, Huntington High School in Cabell County, and Berkeley Springs High School in Morgan County!