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Updates on our chapters

Harrison

Read Aloud West Virginia has been granted funds from Dominion Energy Foundation to cultivate a new Read Aloud chapter in Harrison County. During our Books-A-Million fundraiser a few months ago, Marion County volunteers who crossed county borders to help out received frequent questions about the fledgling chapter. To get involved, email stateoffice@readaloudwv.org.


Preston

Preston County chapter members gave out children’s magazines and encouraged parents to read with children at a Lights On! event in Kingwood.


Logan

Communications & Development Director Amanda Schwartz attended a Logan County Community Baby Shower hosted by Mountain State Healthy Families. This event not only allowed us to reach new and expecting parents in Logan County about reading together from birth, but also connected us with new potential partners in Logan County, like their local Headstart and WIC offices.


Greenbrier

Read Aloud of Greenbrier County is getting ready to put on several Snuggle & Read events with local PreK students.


Marion

Marion County chapter board member Nicole Walls attended a Marion County Family Resource Meeting and met Pam Nolan of Marion County Headstart. This led to interest from the North Central West Virginia Headstart centers in enrolling with Read Aloud’s programs. Rivesville and West Fairmont Headstart centers have already enrolled.


Jennifer Foster prepares blankets for the Berkeley County Chapter.

Berkeley

The Berkeley County chapter is gearing up for their series of Snuggle & Read events funded by Procter & Gamble. They recently had a blanket making party to prep the two-sided fleece tie blankets for the parents and children to complete at the events. Special thanks to participating volunteers, the local MOMS Club, and Jessica Ramey for helping make this possible.


Raleigh

Raleigh County just had their first Reader Appreciation event of the year, and it looks like it was a success! We’re happy for any opportunity to say thank you to our wonderful readers who change the lives of kids across the state.


Kanawha

Preschoolers at Bream Preschool in Charleston show off their bookmarks and magazines with volunteer reader and Kanawha chapter board member Raney Exline, an education major (rear).

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A Doctor’s Advice on Reading

Parents want to do what’s best for their children, but there is confusion about what is best. Dr. John S. Hutton recommends:

  • Read picture books for at least 15 minutes a day with your child. Longer is fine.
  • Start shortly after birth. With infants, reading is not about learning the ABCs or even understanding the story. It is about establishing the routine and starting a dialogue.
  • Keep children away from phones, tablets and other screens, including TV, before age 2. The one exception is video chatting with loved ones who are far away, but not until 18 months.
  • Phone and tablet apps are easy to carry and to use, and marketers promise learning benefits. But those apps have not been studied and shown to work. “Reading, by contrast, has been well studied,” Hutton said. “We know it works, but it is just kind of oldfashioned.”
  • For toddlers, limit screen time to an hour a day.
  • Keep reading with children even after they start school and after they can read themselves.
  • Don’t use screens to pacify children. Children are learning to handle their emotions and control their reactions. “They need practice, and if they’re constantly soothed with devices, they are short-circuiting this process and their ability to handle their own stuff. They don’t learn to regulate their behavior,” Hutton said.
  • Keep screens out of the bedroom, where they tend to lead to later bedtimes and disrupt sleep, homework and reading. “That’s one of worst places for screens to be. Anything that disrupts sleep causes all kinds of trouble.”
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How Accelerated Reader turned my daughter off books

By Lynn Kessler

I’ve been reading to my daughter, who is now 12, since she was born. She always loved it. At 6 months old, she would sit for long stretches on my lap while we read Go, Dog. Go! and Bear Snores On. Her first full sentence, at 18 months, was “Read Dog Go.” I knew then she was destined to be a great reader.

Through preschool and kindergarten, her reading skills and scores were always above expectations for her age. We snuggled up and read together every night before bed.

When she started first grade and began using the Accelerated Reader (AR) program, she did well on the tests, scored a lot of points, and looked forward to taking tests and receiving rewards and recognition for her achievements.

I recall a conversation around this time with a friend in education who was not a fan of AR. The program, she said, was detrimental to the intrinsic motivation that is critical to develop lifelong, avid readers.

“I don’t know,” I responded. “She seems very motivated.”

Cut to the beginning of summer vacation. My 7-year-old is bored.

“Why don’t you read a book?” I suggest.

Then, the reply I never expected: “No way! School is out. I don’t have to read!”

After I collected my jaw and my heart from the floor, I called my AR-averse friend to say, “You were right.”

Accelerated Reader, commonly known as AR, is a computer-based program that seeks to encourage kids to read more independently, improve student comprehension and reading skills, and provide a tool for teachers to evaluate student progress and adjust instruction and interventions accordingly.

Renaissance, the for-profit company that owns and sells AR to schools, says on its website:

“Every student can become their most amazing self and discover a lifelong love of reading with the guidance of an expert teacher. Designed based on years of careful research to help teachers introduce students to the magic of books and reading, Accelerated Reader products are the most widely used K–12 reading practice programs.”

I was not able to find pricing information on the Renaissance website, but my general research found that it can cost anywhere from $2,000 to $10,000 a year to implement and maintain the AR program, depending on the size of the school and the package selected.

Renaissance offers plenty of research to support their product, and it seems that the company has attempted to improve upon areas that have received critical feedback. However, there are many literacy experts who feel the program undermines intrinsic motivation and the development of a genuine love of reading.

A report from the U.S. Department of Education’s Institute of Education Sciences (IES) found only two studies that met the agency’s research design standards and evaluated those results. The Institute concluded: “Accelerated Reader was found to have mixed effects on comprehension and no discernible effects on reading fluency for beginning readers.”

The research above focused on measurable academic outcomes — changes for which students can be tested. But what about motivation?

Studies examining intrinsic and extrinsic motivation have shown that rewarding children for a certain behavior can produce immediate results, but then backfire. After an initial period of improvement, students begin to perceive the activity they are completing for a reward as a chore. It is something to be done so they can move on to something they enjoy.

That research is parallel with my personal experience with Accelerated Reader. I believe that this program — now a part of students’ grade calculations in our elementary and middle school — inflicted significant damage upon the years of success I had in encouraging a love of reading in my daughter.

That does not mean, of course, that this will be the case for every child. My younger daughter, a voracious reader, excelled in the AR program until third grade when she struggled to get enough points. That challenge has continued in fourth grade. It concerns me that the goals set for students by the program, and the requirements for grading, become more difficult just as children reach the critical age in third to fourth grade that is widely acknowledged in education as a make-or-break point for reading skills.

I was a Read Aloud volunteer in my 9-yearold daughter’s class. We finished reading The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate. The kids thoroughly enjoyed it. They were engaged in the story and always excited to recap each week, discuss the book, and read more. They were gratified by the ending. After considerable sorrow and hard times for Ivan and his friends, the kids were delighted that the characters found peace and happiness.

Then they reached for their tablets and asked if they could take the AR test.


Lynn Kessler, former Read Aloud staffer, is a reader, writer, mother of two and a Read Aloud volunteer in Kanawha County.

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Ten to try: Readers recommend

Each year, we ask our volunteer readers for books that worked well in their classrooms. Here are some of their favorite titles:

You know you have found a good book when you finish it, and they yell, “Again!” That is what they always do with I Ain’t Gonna Paint No More by Karen Beaumont. (PreK-K)

Jackie Thompson, Kanawha County


There’s a Mouse About the House
by Richard Fowler

I found that asking each child on the first day of Read Aloud what their favorite stories are about helps tremendously with my book selections for the year (as well as their attention span). (PreK-K)
Margaret Tennant, Marion County


When I was Young in the Mountains
by West Virginia’s own Cynthia Rylant

Each week I asked who had read or who had been read to outside of school. It seemed the show of hands and enthusiasm continued to improve during the school term. (Grades PreK-2)

— Jane Cooper, Fayette County


The Day the Crayons Quit
by Olivia Jeffers

Another colorful choice. This time, each crayon in the box writes a letter to Duncan letting him know what is going on. (Grades 1-3)

­ — Catherine Slonaker, Berkeley County


Sylvester and the Magic Pebble by William Steig is about a rock gathering donkey. Our wonderful teacher tells me what they are studying, and I bring in books and things on the topic. (Grades K-1)

Lee File, Raleigh County


There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly
by Lucille Collandro

Holds listeners with folksy illustrations, rhyming and repetition. (Grades K-1)

— Bob Sylvester, Kanawha County


Lon Po Po
by Ed Young

A Chinese version of Little Red Riding Hood. (Grades 3-5)

— Sandra Summers, Jackson County


Because of Winn-Dixie
by Kate DiCamillo

This book follows Opal at a particularly difficult time in her life as she finds a dog that she needs as much as the dog needs her. (Grades 3-5)

— Synthia Kolsun, Tucker County


The Telltale Lilac Bush and Other West Virginia Ghost Tales by Ruth Ann Musick is all in the title. A spooky, local classic. (Grades 6-9)

— Linda D. Mitchem, Raleigh County


Awkward
by Svetlana Chmakova

It was my first experience with reading a graphic novel with the use of the overhead camera and “smart board.” It went well enough that I would do it again with the right book, but it takes some getting used to. (Grades 6 to adult)

— Gary Grosso, Preston County


Compiled by Raney Exline

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James Patterson: ‘It’s not the school’s job to get our kids reading’

To prepare for James Patterson’s appearance at the West Virginia Book Festival in October, Kanawha Circuit Judge Carrie Webster printed a letter the bestselling author had written to his son Jack back in 2007. It was a loving letter at Christmas, urging his son to read for the joy of it, not just to get into Harvard. Patterson promised to give his son at least one book every Christmas and several for the summer.

Webster served as host and moderator of the author Q&A, and confided to him that she wished her own daughter read more.

“It’s your moms’ job,” he said to the judge’s daughter and to the crowd. “She says you are smart, but you could read more.

“It really is,” he said. “It’s not the school’s job to get our kids reading. It’s our job. It’s on the parents, the grandparents, aunts and uncles, all that stuff.”

Patterson didn’t read much as a kid. He thinks it is because his parents and the nuns at his school did not put enticing books in his hands. He discovered reading as a young adult working night shifts at a mental hospital.

Then years later his own son was uninspired by books.

“I said, ‘Jack, you have to read over the summer.’

He said, ‘Do I have to?’

I said, ‘Yeah, unless you want to live in the garage.’”

But the key thing is, he said, kids must have books they really enjoy.

“We went to the local library and got about a dozen books, and by the end of the summer he had read 12 books. It’s going to vary with your kids. He went from being not very interested to going to the library in his school.”

A reader told Patterson that her 7-year-old came running in after a visit to his school library saying: “Nana! Nana! Look what I found. It’s James Patterson!”

“He didn’t know you were a children’s book author,” she said.

Many people don’t know it, he said. One reason he writes for kids: to give them the kind of page-turners that keep them coming back.

“As I say, I think the important thing is if you are a mom or dad or whatever, it really is your job. We’re the ones who are responsible. It’s great to teach your kid how to ride a bike and how to throw a ball, but if they’re not at least competent readers, we’re putting them behind the eight-ball.

Patterson’s son Jack, now 21, is a reader and has since collaborated with his dad on a picture book, Penguins of America.

“Look. We have rules in the house. You can’t come in and track mud on the rug. You’ve got to show up to meals. It just needs to be a rule,” Patterson said.

Afterward, Webster thought back. “I loved reading as a child — Nancy Drew and Trixie Belden,” she said. As an adult, she enjoyed Patterson’s Alex Cross series, though thanks to her phone, she doesn’t read like she used to.

Her daughter loved reading in the early grades (and was a big Accelerated Reader fan). “Now she reads only when she has to,” Webster said.

Around the time of Patterson’s appearance, her daughter asked if they could read together like they used to.

“We need to do that,” Webster said. “I’m going to take her to the bookstore.”

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Are you raising a reader?

The more time we spend reading to the babies and children in our lives, the better their young brains organize themselves, forming networks essential to learning to read around age 6.

Dr. John Hutton can see it in their brain scans.

The more we pacify babies and children with screens, even supposedly educational apps, the more screen time short circuits essential connections that the brain is primed to develop in the first years of life.

He can see that, too.

A pediatrician at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital and “spokes doctor” for the national campaign, Read Aloud 15 Minutes, Hutton presented some of his findings to doctors and educators at Marshall University in October at an event sponsored by Marshall’s June Harless Center for Rural Educational Research and Development.

“Why does this matter to pediatricians?” he asked. “Reading we know is a major public health concern. It is considered a social determinant of health.”

First, some background

Human brains are born ready to do certain things, such as see and speak.

“But out of the box, there’s not an actual network in the brain that automatically knows how to read. We have to make it,” Hutton said.

Human beings do this by using brain networks that evolved for other things. So, as parents talk and sing with babies, their language networks are stimulated.

“This tends to happen in a predictable sequence,” Hutton said. As parents show picture books to babies and toddlers, other brain networks are engaged – vision, attention and executive function, for example.

“All these areas need to be stimulated during early childhood. The more you stimulate them, the more they form networks to work together. The more you stimulate them, the stronger they get.

“If all that goes well, that’s how this emerging literacy process is fueled,” he said.

Long before the ABCs

Emerging literacy is a collection of skills – how to read, background knowledge, and attitude, Hutton said.

The how-to includes how a book works.

Turning pages. We read from left to right. Children learn these details years before it is time to learn ABCs or to sound out words.

As children listen to books, look at pictures and converse with others, they build up a store of words and ideas. Later, when it is time to “learn to read,” children draw on those words, matching them to words they are learning to decode in school.

Children who hear and learn fewer words during their first four years do not read as easily as children with more words.

And then there is attitude.

“This is the underrated part,” Hutton said. “Do I like to read? Did I grow up in a home that valued reading? Is reading fun? Or is reading more of a chore?

“That’s one of the challenges we have, to really reinforce the idea that reading is something that should be seen as a fun and nurturing and positive thing, not just something that is all about how you are going to do on the test later.”

The brain, on books

Earlier surveys counting books and reading time, for example, showed that children who spent more time with books from an early age had better readings skills and scores. But could you observe a physiological difference?

Hutton and colleagues did MRI scans on healthy preschoolers. They scanned brains while children listened to stories, and again when they heard random noises.

“What we found was there was a difference,” he said. In children who had been read to more, there was more activity, including in the part of the brain associated with vision. Doctors think that is the child’s imagination.

“It’s pretty amazing,” he said. “Kids who have more practice, more experience with books and reading, have more ability to activate the part of the brain that’s involved in imagining what’s going on in the story and then understanding what it means.”

“This is pretty exciting. It’s really the first study to show reading early on makes a difference in how their brains function,” he said.

Quality counts

So, the number and frequency of books is important. What about quality of the experience?

Hutton’s team watched parents read to children and scored the range of their behaviors. Some read in a monotone. Some made sound effects and involved children. One even looked at a phone while reading.

They scanned children’s brains and found that children of parents who read more interactively, where children had turns at talking about the story, had more activity in both the back and front of the brain. These areas are associated with imagination, chronology, expressive language, and understanding emotions.

Parents, teachers and doctors have long observed that kids who interact more with stories have stronger language skills. Hutton’s research corroborates that observation.

“More interactive reading experience leads to stronger activation in the part of the brain that’s involved in knowing how to talk,” he said. “And also integrating what they hear in the story with how they feel about it.

“It really is a pretty powerful parallel with what behavioral research has shown in terms of the benefits of interactive reading.”

Lost in a good book

Was there a difference in the brains of children who were visibly engrossed in a book compared to those who weren’t?

Yes.

Kids who showed greater interest in the story had more activation in the cerebellum, a rear section associated with helping the whole brain learn new things.

“We call it a storytime turbocharger for learning,” Hutton said. Children who were most interested were probably more likely to be learning something. He could see their brains doing it.

“We should be coaching families to get kids involved in the story, sharing the process, to talk about it, to ask questions,” he said.

Goldilocks effect

Then they looked at brains receiving stories in different formats – audio only, an animated story app, and a traditional picture book. They evaluated how much the different parts of the brain were working together.

Small children who listened to audio only without pictures had much less network activity. There were no pictures to help with unfamiliar words.

“Too cold,” Hutton said.

When children looked at the same story animated, there was a lot of activity associated with visual processing, but little else.

“All the sudden the networks stopped talking to each other. “When animation happens, there is a 37 percent drop-off in cooperation between these networks. The imagination part is less needed, so there is more focus on the visual processing part.

“When you animate a story, it short circuits the child’s imagination.”

“Too hot,” Hutton said.

The old-fashioned picture book?

“When you put pictures with the audio, there is greater cooperation among parts of brain,” he said.

“It was just right.”

But wait, there’s more

“Books are also a way to learn about feelings,” Hutton said.

“It’s a way to really exchange emotions with a child, from promoting early experiences of nurturing and feeling cared for to relating to what characters in books are feeling.

“This is how kids learn a lot of these feelings. They are able to put themselves into the minds of other characters.”

Social and emotional maturity is also a predictor of school success. Learning to think about the world from another’s point of view helps.

“All those things involve practice, and they start early,” Hutton said.

“That’s another real benefit of reading with a child. You’re not only building their vocabulary but also their ability to process their feelings and to put themselves in other people’s shoes. I think that’s another benefit that may be underrecognized.”

NAEP scores

Shortly after Hutton’s visit, the National Assessment of Educational Progress released its 2019 scores. West Virginia fourth graders dropped four points in reading to 213 on the 500-point scale. The national average is 240. No one was surprised.

Read Aloud West Virginia sees three main reasons. Poverty interferes with children’s learning and exacerbates other problems, and West Virginia children are disproportionately poor. Opioid addiction has killed parents and destroyed families, further harming children and their ability to learn. And then there is screen time.

In another study, Hutton said, most parents were reading to their infants frequently, and 34 percent read once or twice a week.

But at two months, 68 percent of babies were watching TV regularly, and TV time turned into hours, not minutes.

Read Aloud 15 Minutes surveyed parents and found that reading to children every day dropped between 2018 and 2016, with the biggest drops among kids ages 6 to 8.

“I would argue that kids at this age still need to be read to,” Hutton said. “Even if they can read, the content of the book leads to lots of questions, lots of things the parent can really talk to them about.”

West Virginia teachers have been telling Read Aloud that they are seeing more language delays among children entering school in recent years.

The state Department of Education reports 2,122 children had an identified developmental delay in 2018, up 9 percent from 1,946 children in 2013.

‘Neurons that fire together wire together.’

Then in November, Dr. Hutton’s latest research appeared in the journal JAMAPediatrics.

He studied preschoolers who were exposed to more digital media than the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends. Those guidelines include no digital media before age 2 except for video chatting and no more than an hour of high-quality children’s programming a day for ages 2 to 5.

This time, scans showed brains exposed to more screen time were associated with less of the desirable fat coating of nerve cell connectors – a process called myelinization. Myelin is what makes the brain’s white matter white. It insulates nerve cells and makes them more efficient at signalling each other, like the insulation on electrical wires.

There is an old adage in neuroscience, Dr. Hutton said: “Neurons that fire together wire together.”

“The more these areas are encouraged to talk to one another, whether language areas or executive function, the more that coating of the wires is stimulated,” Dr. Hutton told the New York Times. “The amount of myelin around a nerve fiber is directly related to how often it’s stimulated, how often it’s used.”

Possibly, he said, kids with more screen time have less myelinization of networks important for language and literacy because the screens crowd out other things that are shown to stimulate healthy brain development.

Back in Huntington, Hutton told doctors and educators that the number of books, the frequency, the quality of reading and the format are all important to children’s brain development.

“I would interpret this as saying you need books, you need to read them pretty often, read them interactively, and as boring as possible in terms of the format. Boring being straight up picture books.

“I really would argue there’s not a better invention. We haven’t invented a better mousetrap at that age if we want to stimulate brain networks to develop in the most strong and functional way.”

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Alarming WV NAEP scores are no surprise

CHARLESTON, WV (Oct. 30, 2019) — We are distressed, but sadly not surprised to learn that West Virginia’s scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) are so low. 

Educators tells us they are seeing children enter school with language delays at rates they have never seen before, and that is happening at all income levels.  

Why is West Virginia going backwards? We believe three factors have influenced the language delays incoming students are experiencing:

  • Screen time competes with the attention of children and their parents, distracting them from habits that raise good readers to habits that short-circuit the necessary pre-literacy skills that would develop in the years before school. 
  • High concentrations of opioid addiction has killed parents, destroyed homes and stressed children, interfering with their learning. 
  • Economic distress continues to be an obstacle for West Virginia children and their families. 

In some schools, reading scores on state assessments have dropped by half during the last two years as these factors have grown more severe. 

Yet, it is no secret how to prevent these language delays. 

Current brain research is very clear. Children begin developing the skills needed to read soon after birth, if families, talk, sing and read to them. 

In families where children are prevented from using phones and other devices until at least age 2, in homes where children are safe, nourished and read to daily, there are no preventable reading delays. 

The problem is even deeper than poor reading scores, which are predictors of low educational achievement, low employment prospects, poverty and poor health. 

Teachers are increasingly asked to take on the additional responsibilities of social work and surrogate parenting as the students they are trying to teach are traumatized and neglected because of the opioid crisis. Feeling unprepared and overwhelmed, teachers burn out and leave the profession. Schools tell us that they are unable to fill classroom positions.  

It is imperative that a state which is seeking to diversify its economy focus on improving literacy as the essential first step in developing a healthy and educated workforce.  

Literacy is a three-legged stool. West Virginia’s literacy problems cannot be solved by teachers alone. Reading instruction in the classroom is just one leg of the stool. Families get children first during a critical period of brain and language development, and they serve as a critical leg of the stool. The third leg is the community that supports libraries and literacy initiatives, and most importantly, shows children it values reading skills as much as it values athletic skills. Children work to develop those skills that are valued by the people around them. 

Some steps to focus on literacy include: 

  • New parents should be taught that reading to children from birth is not just a nice thing. It is as important as putting a child in a car seat or making them wear bicycle helmets. It is a necessary part of rearing healthy children capable of learning and succeeding. 
  • Fund and develop school and public libraries. 
  • Fund literacy programs such as our own that put books in children’s hands. We welcome other programs such as Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library and Reach Out and Read in doctors’ offices. 

Read Aloud West Virginia has long advocated the importance of health care providers in influencing children’s early literacy. Read Aloud remains eager to work with health care providers who see young families before children enter school. 

It is important to remember this is an aggregate score for the whole state. Not every school is losing ground. We work with schools that, by practicing what the research shows in teaching reading, and creating text-rich, reader friendly environments, have actually seen their scores increase, significantly, in recent years. 

But Read Aloud is not in every school. Reach Out and Read is not in every doctor’s office. Imagination Library is not in every county. A daily reading habit is not in every home. 

“These reading scores are tremendously frustrating and disheartening. I anticipated them, and they break my heart,” said Read Aloud West Virginia Executive Director Mary Kay Bond. 

——— 

Read Aloud West Virginia is a homegrown West Virginia 501-c-3 organization that motivates children to read for fun, because research (including previous NAEP surveys) shows that children who read for pleasure read more often and have better reading skills. 

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‘Find the right book’ at the WV Book Festival, Oct. 4-5

Looking for your next favorite book? The West Virginia Book Festival’s got you covered. With a used book sale, writing workshops, and a line-up of authors including James Patterson, Salina Yoon, Orson Scott Card, and more, this gathering of readers and writers will have something for the whole family.

Orson Scott Card
James Patterson

Read Aloud is particularly excited about the opportunity for cross-generational interest in authors. Headliner James Patterson, for example, a well-known adult author, also has several successful young adult (YA) series, including Maximum Ride, Middle School, and I Funny. Orson Scott Card, author of the popular sci-fi novel, Ender’s Game, also has a YA series called Pathfinder. This is a great opportunity for parents to foster and/or bolster a love of reading with their children through the shared experience of meeting or discovering an author they both enjoy.

James Patterson claims to have set a mission with his writing career that we heartily agree with – “to prove that there is no such thing as a person who ‘doesn’t like to read,’ only people who haven’t found the right book.” We hope to see this message resonate through all aspects of this year’s book festival and awaken the reader in everyone.

Join us on October 4-5 at the Charleston Coliseum & Convention Center to celebrate our favorite thing – books!

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Ways to contribute & why we ask

Our volunteer readers and chapters are the face of Read Aloud, doing the rewarding work, week after week, of motivating children to read for fun. Children who read for pleasure grow into better readers and are more likely to excel in school and beyond. That makes Read Aloud a long-term economic development program.

By supporting Read Aloud, donors make possible the recruitment and organization of our army of 1,100 weekly volunteers, intentional book distribution efforts that stress children’s book choice and ownership, and public education programs that teach families about the importance of reading together.

Ways to give to Read Aloud WV:

  • Give to our Annual Fund.
    Read Aloud West Virginia exists entirely on donations from individuals, businesses and foundations. Read Aloud supporters make everything else possible – winning grants and awards for book distribution, leveraging gifts into higher-impact projects, and collaborating with schools and other groups (see page 1). Mailing a check is still the most efficient way to give. Donors are also welcome to give here on our website.

  • Direct a Required Minimum Distribution from a tax-deferred account.
    At age 70½, the federal government requires owners of tax-deferred retirement accounts to take a minimum distribution. Have your financial institution send the disbursement directly to a charity, such as Read Aloud, and the IRS doesn’t count it as taxable income. If it is $500 or more, it may also qualify for state NIP tax credits.

  • Qualify for NIP tax credits.
    Donate $500 or more to a qualifying organization, such as Read Aloud, and receive West Virginia Neighborhood Investment Program tax credits. The credits reduce state personal income tax or corporate net income tax bills by as much as half the gift amount. They can be spread out and used over a five-year period. Donors can receive as much as $100,000 a year in NIP tax credits. Taxpayers may reduce their tax bills by no more than half. Because it is a tax credit, it lowers a tax bill whether the taxpayer itemizes or not.

  • If you are a Kroger customer, set your Kroger Plus card account to benefit Read Aloud West Virginia. Then, shop as usual, and every quarter, Kroger sends Read Aloud a check for a percentage of your spending. Encourage a friend or relative to sign up, too. This kind of passive income is extremely efficient for an organization.

  • If you shop at Amazon, go to smile.amazon.com. Designate Read Aloud as your chosen charity, and as you shop, Amazon will forward a commission to Read Aloud. You must remember to shop at smile.amazon.com for Read Aloud to benefit. Recruit a friend and double your impact.

  • Shop at Books-a-Million’s West Virginia stores on Saturday, Sept. 21. Save the date. When you shop at a BAM! store in Barboursville, Beckley, Bluefield, Bridgeport, Charleston, Martinsburg, Morgantown, Vienna or Wheeling on Sept. 21 and mention Read Aloud at the check-out, Books-a-Million will donate a generous percentage of your purchase to Read Aloud West Virginia.

If you’re only able to give your time right now, please visit our Get Involved page to learn more. We’re so grateful for every donation that comes in and every volunteer that shows up. It’s impossible to say it enough, but we try – thank you for all you do for WV literacy and Read Aloud WV.

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Ten to try: Back to school!

We polled our chapters for some of their favorite books. Here are a few good icebreaker books to start the new school year:

The Monster at the End of this Book
By Jon Stone and Michael Smollin

Grover was breaking the fourth wall before it was cool. Whatever you do, don’t turn the page. “There is a monster at the end of this book.” This was an inexpensive grocery store book back when today’s grandparents were in kindergarten. It still delights young and old.

— Ginny Dixon, Upshur County


Rosie Revere, Engineer
By Andrea Beaty and David Roberts.

“This is the story of Rosie Revere, who dreamed of becoming a great engineer.” In rhyming couplets, Rosie secretly works on her wonderful gadgets.

— Amber Myers, Harrison County


Naughty Mabel
By Nathan Lane and Devlin Elliott

From the first page, in a pool before a classical mansion, Mabel sets the tone: “Hello, darlings. Allow me to introduce myself. I’m Mabel. Mabel of the Hamptons. And this is my humble abode.” Witty use of vocabulary, even for middle school.

— Stephanie Burns, Pocahontas County


Room on the Broom
By Julia Donaldson

A witch and her cat are perfectly content on their broom, until the witch starts inviting new friends along.

­— Bev Mathias, Hardy County


Guys Write for Guys Read, specifically a short story called “The Follower”
By Jack Gantos

Young Jack is fascinated (and too easily led) by the wild and dangerous kid next door, who, among other things, catapults himself into the next yard and rides his bike off the roof. I like to leave students laughing on the first day and hungry for more next week. This funny but cautionary tale is a discussion starter for the upper grades.

— Dawn Miller, Kanawha County


We Don’t Eat Our Classmates By Ryan T. Higgins

Preschoolers may see themselves in Penelope Rex, who wonders how many teeth her new classmates will have.

— Steph Murphy, Randolph County


It’s a Book
By Lane Smith

“How do you scroll down? Do you blog with it? Can you make characters fight?” A little character peppers his reading friend with questions. Combine that with Oh, the Places You’ll Go! by Dr. Seuss, with your head full of brains and your shoes full of feet. I like to start with these.

– Casey Willson, Berkeley County


Homer Price
By Robert McCloskey

First published in 1943, the funny, gentle, witty tales can still amuse. Centerburg is a place to return to, again and again. The short stories slot nicely into read aloud sessions around fourth grade.

— Lauren Jarroll, Nicholas County


The Dot
By Peter H. Reynolds

A frustrated student who insists that she cannot draw finds out where just making an attempt can take her, thanks to a wise art teacher. This book speaks to a range of ages.

— Angie Westfall, Upshur County