Dan Foster

Join Team Read and WVU Coach Neal Brown: Read-A-Palooza 2019 on June 6

Join Read Aloud and WVU Football Coach Neal Brown in building excitement for books and reading at our annual fundraiser, Read-A-Palooza, at the University of Charleston Riggleman Rotunda on June 6!

Though we may be a little later than usual this year, Read-A-Palooza is sure to be bigger and better than ever with a new venue courtesy of our partnership with the University of Charleston Education Department, and our 2019 theme: “Join Team Read,” exploring how we can create a culture that values reading in the same way we do sports.

The event will open at 4:30 p.m., and Coach Brown will give his remarks at 5:15 p.m. As always, we’ll have appetizers, beer and wine, and a silent auction to augment the lively conversation and good company that’s a staple of Read-A-Palooza. As our largest fundraiser of the year, proceeds from the event help fund Read Aloud programs, which strive to engage all members of our communities in motivating children to want to read.

Tickets are $40 prior to June 6 or $50 at the door, but for those looking for a little more facetime with Coach Brown, we’re offering a special pre-event reception with him for sponsors of $1,000 or more. Sponsorships also come with tickets and public recognition, including logo displays at the event, depending on the level. To find out more about how to purchase tickets and sponsorships, visit the Donate tab, click here, or call the state Read Aloud office at 304-345-5212.

We hope you will join us as we celebrate Read Aloud’s progress and look forward to new reading adventures!

baby-babysitter-babysitting-1741231

An open letter to moms who read

Dear Reader,

This Mother’s Day, we’d like to take a moment to thank you for reading to your child. By teaching them to value reading, you’re planting and nurturing a reading seed that will flourish over the years, giving your child a lifelong love of books. This is truly something to be proud of, and something for which the staff at Read Aloud would like to express our gratitude. By creating a positive relationship with reading, you’re raising a child who can and will pass that passion for books on to others, who will in turn pass it on. Your one reading seed could spread to impact thousands of people! 

So this Mother’s Day, congratulate yourself for every story you’ve read, every library trip you’ve made, every book you’ve bought – you’re changing the world, one page at a time.

Thank you for all that you do for literacy in WV, and happy Mother’s Day!

Sincerely,

Read Aloud West Virginia


Click here to visit our Mother’s Day Honor Wall to see all the moms being recognized by their children for teaching them to love reading!

kids-1550017_1920

Make summer a time for growth

For decades, researchers, teachers and parents have observed that children who read for pleasure during summer break tend to have better scores and understanding in school. Children must have the “equipment” and opportunity to read for fun over the summer. Here are some ways to make reading for fun likely to happen this summer:

  • Keep books around. Check them out of the public library. Keep a few in the car.
  • Make time to read every day. Even a few minutes count. No quizzes or tests. Just fun. If the book isn’t enjoyable, give it back and try another.
  • Give books as gifts.
  • Ask readers what they like. Get recommendations from other readers until you find something enjoyable to you and the children in your life.
  • List five books you would like to read this summer. Share your goal.
  • Organize a book swap, suggests Donalyn Miller, author of Reading in the Wild: The Book Whisperer’s Keys to Cultivating Lifelong Reading Habits. In her school, teachers and students donate books and receive tickets. Then they browse and choose a “new” book in exchange for each ticket.
  • Pack books for trips or errands. Keep a book to read while standing in line.
  • Host a library card sign-up event, Miller suggests. Invite librarians to share details of summer reading programs.
  • Read aloud to children, even after they are able to read on their own. Children take their cue for what is important from the adults around them.

Children who read during the summer are more likely to maintain or even gain reading skills, report Richard L. Allington and Anne McGill-Franzen in their book Summer Reading: Closing the Rich/Poor Reading Achievement Gap.

Citing the same research, Stephen D. Krashen points out in The Power of Reading that reading just one book over the summer was associated with a small improvement in reading comprehension. Reading five books over the summer can stop summer learning loss.

Among low-income children, summer reading loss accounts for about 80 percent of the reading achievement gap compared to wealthier classmates.

“What you may find surprising is just how consistently making books available to children from low-income families and to struggling readers enhances reading achievement during the summer months,” Allington writes.

21764f7fd86dda49e147b66c27b8c95a_f27

Good medicine: Future doctors read to children at WVU hospital

By Kaitlyn Guynn

First-year medical student Ryan Cook reads Duck & Goose Find a Pumpkin by Tad Hills to a child in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown

In the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at WVU’s Ruby Memorial Hospital, an infant was connected to various monitors, including one that registered the beep, beep, beep of the baby’s rapid heart rate.

A medical student read to the baby.

“The child’s heart rate slowed down to a relaxed state,” said Katie Ridenour, School Intervention Specialist at Ruby Memorial Hospital.

The student is participating in a new effort of the medical school and Read Aloud West Virginia.

Ridenour, a former teacher in Marion County, works to help children maintain as many normal childhood routines and activities as possible while they are in the hospital.

Having seen the success of Read Aloud in Marion County, Ridenour reached out to Read Aloud, said Read Aloud Executive Director Mary Kay Bond.

They worked together to organize 13 medical students to read regularly to pediatric patients, sometimes two to four children at a time.

The educational benefits of reading aloud to children are well established. Volunteers have witnessed other benefits among these children. In addition to the baby who was soothed, children and their parents are pleased when readers enter the hospital room.

“For a volunteer to come and knock, and just visit to read to you, their faces light up knowing that it’s not for a medical procedure,” Ridenour said.

“It’s been great, with positive feedback from the families,” she said. “It’s a nice program, and it’s been really satisfying.”

In addition to serving children in the hospital, this effort gives medical students the opportunity to discover the value of reading to children from birth so they can model and encourage read aloud habits in their own practices in the near future.

“Absolutely,” said Levi Snedegar, a first-year medical student who plans to take the experience into his practice, whether that turns out to be pediatrics or primary care.

“I was actually in a program where we would shadow a child visit,” he said. “They would receive a book based on their age or cognitive development.”

“We want to connect to health care providers,” Bond said. “Health care providers see children at much earlier stages of development, and we seek to reach children at the earliest stage possible. It is a critically important time and sets the tone for a child’s education.”

When children are read to from birth, “They come already primed and ready before they enter the schoolhouse door,” she said.

The American Academy of Pediatrics began in 2014 to recommend reading to children every day from birth. Reading to babies not only strengthens their bonding with caregivers, but also increases their language skills, including vocabulary. Reading aloud to children boosts brain activity and social and emotional development.

At the WVU School of Medicine, students feel the benefit of reading to children, as well as their young patients.

“A lot of them are volunteering because they have pediatrics in mind,” Ridenour said. “It gives them good exposure for treating [patients] as a whole, and not just about treating them medically. But emotionally, cognitively, and physically as well.”

“This program is an integral part of their inpatient care, and a rewarding part as well, for first- and second-year medical students,” Snedegar said. “If this program was implemented across the county, there would be less of a burnout rate.

“It is an absolutely awesome experience. Too often you get tied down with studying and not allowed to actually visit with the children.”

——-

Read Aloud West Virginia wants to partner with health care providers around the state to help them help families, and to motivate children to want to read. To explore the possibilities, contact us at stateoffice@readaloudwv.org.

Kaitlyn Guynn is a student at the University of Charleston.

kids_reading

If you give a kid a bag of books…

If you heard research that shows $60 worth of books can make the difference between whether students lose reading skill over the summer, or whether they maintain it, would that motivate you to put books in children’s hands?

That’s what happened to Read Aloud Executive Director Mary Kay Bond.

With help from the Mary B. Nickell Foundation, the Carter Family Foundation and Brookfield Renewable, Read Aloud’s Summer Book Binge is now in its fourth year.

The number of schools involved has grown from one to four. Crichton Elementary in Greenbrier County, now funded by the Mary B. Nickell Foundation, was the site of the first summer book distribution four years ago with a grant from the Hollowell Foundation.

Last summer, Clear Fork Elementary in Raleigh and Gauley Bridge Elementary in Fayette followed. A fourth school, George C. Weimer Elementary in Kanawha, will participate this year thanks to the award from The UPS Store Inc.

Summer learning loss is a big problem. Children who do not have stimulating summer activities, such as parents or grandparents who read to them, can lose months of progress over the summer. Over the years, the loss is cumulative, so by graduation, students can be a year or more behind their peers.

Reading, just for fun, is a reliable antidote. Students who read for pleasure over the summer maintain or even gain skills.

Book choice and ownership are motivating, so Read Aloud works with those schools to let children see, hold and preview books in advance. Teachers talk about the books, offering their own experience and recommendations. Then each child in the school “orders” books, including a couple alternates in case their favorites run out.

On distribution day, each child gets a tote bag of his or her chosen books. Each book has a book plate printed with the child’s name.

Since the first summer book distribution in 2016, results have been promising.

On the 2014-15 statewide annual assessment, 30 percent of Crichton students scored proficient in reading, while the overall state score was 46.36 percent of students. While the state score has dropped slightly since then. Crichton’s is trending upward, standing at 57.58 percent of students scoring proficient as of the 2017-18 school year.

Crichton Principal Donna Nickell credits three things:

  • Curriculum called Read Well where teachers work with whole classes, small groups and individuals to tailor instruction to students’ needs.
  • Extra time and attention for children who need it.
  • And Read Aloud West Virginia’s summer book distribution.

“I do attribute it to the books they’re getting, to Read Aloud, and to the Read Well program,” Nickell said. “I know the kids love the books over the summer,” she recalled at the start of the school year. “They were so excited. I’ve heard girls talking about books they got.”

At Clear Fork Elementary School, first grade teacher Lisa Cabell, said in her classroom, she can tell the difference between children who read or who have been read to at home and those who are not readers.

Even before the school’s computer assessment tool was functional this school year, Ms. Cabell said, she perceived improvement in some children’s reading skills at the start of the school year. She believes the summer books and the enthusiasm generated around giving children books at the end of the last school year contributed to the improvement she saw.

“I would like to see it again. I think it would be very helpful,” she said. “Our area is a very rural area. A lot of kids are not able to go the library, and they may not be able to afford their own books,” Cabell said. “We have the Bookmobile that comes to school and gives them a chance to get a book, but it’s great to have a book that you don’t have to give back.”

book-2135767_1920

What’s special about Cabell County’s Flashlight Reading Night?

With support from WSAZ Children’s Charities, Read Aloud West Virginia of Cabell County is teaming up with the Cabell County Reading Council to host a Flashlight Reading Night to encourage parents and children to read together this summer! The event will be on Tuesday, April 30 from 4:30-6:30 p.m. at Guyandotte Elementary, and is a great example of the way our Read Aloud chapters across the state are innovating and creating programs that work for the people they’re serving.

literature-3060241_1920

Fall in Love with Reading this Valentine’s Day

Check out these book recommendations for Valentine’s Day!

Somebody Loves You, Mr. Hatch by Eileen Spinelli. Mr. Hatch “keeps to himself.” That’s what everybody says. Then one day he gets a surprise package, and a note: “Somebody loves you.” Good for kindergarten through third grade.



Nate the Great and the Mushy Valentine by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat. Who has left an anonymous note for Nate’s dog Sludge: “I love you, Sludge, more than fudge”? Kindergarten and first graders can puzzle out the answer alongside Detective Nate the Great. 


Looking at Lincoln by Maira Kalman. OK, not a Valentine’s book, but one for the birthday of Abraham Lincoln, who, among other accomplishments, signed West Virginia into existence. The book is a short, readable biography, but also a thoughtful look at the places Lincoln’s image appears in today’s world. Enjoyable throughout elementary school.


Saint Valentine by Robert Sabuda. Famous pop-up picture book artist Robert Sabuda, who appeared at the 2015 West Virginia Book Festival, created paper mosaics to evoke third-century Rome in his story of the original St. Valentine, a healer who sent a secret message to a little girl. Good non-fiction for upper elementary.

books-1245690_1920

UPS Store Inc. awards Read Aloud WV $10,000 worth of books

The UPS Store, Inc. named Read Aloud West Virginia as one of 10 non-profit organizations across the country to each receive $10,000 worth of books to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the Toys for Tots® Literacy Program, which promotes children’s literacy in low-income and disadvantaged communities across the United States.

The UPS Store, Inc. will donate $10,000 worth of books from Scholastic.

The UPS Store, Inc. invited the public to nominate qualifying charitable and philanthropic groups, receiving over 1,000 submissions. Kanawha County volunteer Lesley McCallister nominated Read Aloud.

A selection committee reviewed all nominations and chose the 10 recipients based on their mission to serving children in underserved communities, especially by providing educational resources and enrichment.