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Bedtime Book Club carries on Snuggle and Read tradition

By Suzette Lowe

The phrase ‘the book will find the child’ holds true for the partnership of Jackson County Early Explorers and Read Aloud of Jackson County.

Cheryl Miller, a longtime Read Aloud volunteer and force behind the county’s Snuggle and Read program, has seen firsthand how impactful the experience can be for young readers.

A Jackson County student visits the Read, Play, Grow station at Cedar Lakes to get an Early Explorers book bag.

“When we were able to have that type of story time, the children picked out the book that appealed to them, one that ‘found’ them that they could take home, along with a blanket provided by Constellium,” she said. “It was so precious seeing that connection.”

It was frustrating not being able to have that family reading time with children and their parents during the pandemic. Miller, who co-founded Jackson County Early Explorers with Jessica Isner, also saw the hugely popular Early Explorers program for young children struggling to be active during COVID-19.

“One day, I had a preschooler come up to me, out of the blue, and beg me to read him a story,” said Miller. “I knew right then, and Jessica agreed, that we had to do something to meet this need.”

A natural collaboration between the county’s Read Aloud program and Early Explorers was formed, initially with books that were left over from a past Snuggle and Read. These, along with a blanket, would be put in book bags for children to find at the Read, Play, and Grow station at Cedar Lakes.

“With our mission and knowing how popular Early Explorers past book bag distributions were,” said Janet McCauley, president of the local Read Aloud board, “it was a win-win partnership.”

McCauley said the concern that children would not get ‘their’ book was quickly dispelled.

“The very first child who picked up a packet said ‘oh that’s just what I wanted’, so we knew we’d done our job,” she said.

But still for Miller there was something missing.

“I had another child come up and grab me by the legs and beg for a story,” she said. “It hurt my heart that I couldn’t do that.”

Miller said she couldn’t get the idea of children not getting their bedtime story out of her mind.

“In this pandemic, we forget that children are hurting and feeling stressed,” she said. “They need a time to settle down and feel loved and safe.”

That child hungering for a story planted the seed for Bedtime Book Club.

Each Monday at 6 pm, Miller posts a story time on Facebook. It can be accessed at any time by going on to the Jackson County Early Explorers or Read Aloud Jackson County page.

“First we get the wiggles out, then settle down for three stories.” Miller said.

The “Story Lady” as Miller has been dubbed, has already gotten a large following, including a grumpy cat who comes out of hiding every time he hears her voice.

Knowing that children look forward to each week’s story means so much to Miller.

“I had a little girl come up to me just to share how much she loved the little duck story I read the other night,” she said. McCauley said parents have also expressed their appreciation for the efforts of both Early Explorers and Read Aloud.

“They tell us that their children are hurrying in from outside play to read their books,” she said. “Several have said they hear their children singing or reciting phrases from their favorite stories.”

For Miller and McCauley, that’s what it’s all about, connecting children to books and instilling a love that can last a lifetime.

Suzette Lowe serves on the Read Aloud of Jackson County board

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Energy Express has always held a special spot in my heart

By Bob Johnson

Energy Express has always held a special spot in my heart. Several years ago, the local WVU Extension agent told me about the need for Read Aloud volunteers during the six-weeks-long reading and nutrition program (with two meals served daily) held during summers. The whole process clicked with me. Since I am a part-time teacher, my summers were free. Why not volunteer to read with kids?

Bob Johnson reads to Energy Express students at Cherry River Elementary in Nicholas County.

My first opportunity coincidentally came at my alma mater elementary school. I had spent grades one through eight there. Yes, that dates me, but I fondly and clearly remember the teachers who had taken the effort to read aloud with my classes. There was a warmth in those classrooms, where teachers said, in effect: “I have a beautiful story that I want to share with you.” In my mind’s eye, that is effective instruction.

Over the summers since my first readings, I have subsequently been able to read in three more locations in four sessions with Energy Express. I often use the classic stories of Seuss, since each one holds a nugget of morality which students need to hear from an adult. Sometimes, the readings are supplied by the Energy Express site. While that is convenient, there is no time to rehearse the reading selection, one of my personal rules of reading aloud. Sitting with students is the expectation of many Energy Express locations, but I prefer reading while standing at a music stand or other platform at a convenient height, so my old eyes can easily focus on the reading. It is also the only way I have found to ensure that inflection is heard, and gestures, body language, and expressions are easily seen by listeners.

Energy Express and Read Aloud WV share some common goals: 1) Get valuable books into the hands of students, and/or 2) into the ears of listeners by reading aloud. I am privileged to know the directors of both programs. Mark Swiger heads Energy Express with West Virginia University, while Dawn Miller is at the helm of Read Aloud WV. Both leaders have only one thing in mind, which is reaching readers at many grade levels with enriching opportunities that expand interest in books.

Adult volunteers are an essential part of both reading efforts. Please consider sharing your reading skills with students at every opportunity.

To learn more about Energy Express, go to: extension.wvu.edu/youth-family/youth-education/energy-express

Bob Johnson is a member of the Read Aloud WV of Nicholas County Chapter Board and teaches in a Save the Children US, after-school program at Cherry River Elementary School in Richwood

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Dollar General gives $50,000 in honor of longtime supporter Jennie Fitzkee

By Amanda Schwartz

Photo courtesy of The Kelly Clarkson Show, NBCUniversal Syndication Studios
Jennie Fitzkee, center, is surprised by the announcement of Dollar General’s generous donation on The Kelly Clarkson Show.

When The Kelly Clarkson Show chose to celebrate preschool teacher Jennie Fitzkee ­­— a West Virginia native and longtime Read Aloud WV supporter ­—Read Aloud’s Executive Director Dawn Miller was asked to video call in to the filming as a surprise.

“Anything for Jennie Fitzkee!” she replied.

Miller was excited to be part of recognizing a dedicated supporter and local literacy champion, but had no idea there was a surprise in store. Both Fitzkee and Miller were shocked and deeply touched by Dollar General’s announcement of a $50,000 gift to Read Aloud in honor of Fitzkee and World Teacher Day.

Fitzkee became involved with Read Aloud in 2012 after the passing of her childhood friend, Read Aloud champion Candy Galyean. Fitzkee (born Jennie Lively Lytton) grew up with Galyean in Huntington, but moved to Groton, Mass., where she has been a preschool teacher for almost 40 years. When her sister sent Galyeans’s obituary in 2012, Fitzkee saw it suggested donations to Read Aloud West Virginia.

“I thought, ‘This has got to be someplace else!’” Fitzkee recalled. “I just can’t believe this! I never knew about this wonderful place.”

Fitzkee called and spoke with Read Aloud founder and then Executive Director Mary Kay Bond. They had much in common, including an inspiration, Jim Trelease, author of The Read Aloud Handbook, first published in 1979.

Eager to give back to her home state and support her friend’s legacy, Fitzkee began collecting books. She and her students and community gathered so many she and husband Steve Fitzkee rented a truck and drove them all the way from Groton, Mass. to Charleston.

After that momentous donation, Fitzkee has continued to support Read Aloud, nurtures readers through her blog “A Teacher’s Reflections,” and has contributed to this newsletter.

“This gift means so much to us,” said Executive Director Dawn Miller. “It is an acknowledgment of the lifelong value of our work to help children develop an intrinsic motivation to read, and it will help Read Aloud to stay strong and flexible, of course.

“But with this gift the Dollar General Literacy Foundation also recognizes the efforts of every volunteer, every teacher, every school coordinator, every principal, every donor ­­— every friend of Read Aloud who has contributed to the effort to help children discover joy in reading,” she said.

“On top of all that, we are touched and honored to still be part of remembering Candy Galyean, who even now plays such an important role in bringing us together in this cause.”

Over the past 28 years, the Dollar General Literacy Foundation has donated more than $203 million to provide funding and resources to support literacy advancement and has helped more than 14.8 million individuals learn to read. In both 2020 and 2021, they granted funds to Read Aloud to support shipments of self-chosen books to low-income children across the Mountain state, keeping them reading through the pandemic and beyond.

Dollar General’s co-founder, J.L. Turner, was functionally illiterate and never completed a formal education. In 1993, J.L.’s grandson, Cal Turner, Jr., founded the Dollar General Literacy Foundation to honor him and support others’ educational journeys.

Dollar General and the Dollar General Literacy Foundation’s $4.5 million investment to help students, teachers, and nonprofit organizations working to support and improve youth literacy across the country includes more than $3 million in youth literacy grants from the Dollar General Literacy Foundation and a new $1.45 million partnership with education nonprofit Donors Choose.

To watch the announcement and Fitzkee’s heartwarming reaction, click here.

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2021 NIP Tax Credits Now Available

Get them before they’re gone! Read Aloud West Virginia has received Neighborhood Investment Program (NIP) Tax Credits to distribute to eligible donors on a first-come, first-served basis. NIP credits are administered by the state to encourage donations to local nonprofits.

For example, a donation of $1,000 qualifies for up to $500 in NIP credits off of West Virginia personal income or corporate net income taxes. That means donors can have a $1,000 impact for a bottom-line cost of only $500.

Read Aloud WV motivates West Virginia children to read for fun by putting books in their hands and trained volunteer readers in their classrooms. Research shows kids who read for pleasure become stronger readers, setting them up for long-term academic and career success. Every dollar donated to Read Aloud results in more time spent coordinating with families, schools, and volunteers to get kids the tools they need to grow their reading skills. As little as $100 can fund books for an entire classroom, while $1,100 can fund a month of Books for Babies, which gives all new parents delivering at CAMC a board book to encourage them to read to their child from birth. With low-cost, high-impact programs like these, even the minimum donation to qualify for tax credit ($500) can help hundreds of children and families.

Read Aloud has remained on mission throughout the pandemic, adapting book distributions and volunteer classroom reading efforts to meet the new conditions and needs. “We are busier than ever, and our donors make all this work possible,” says Executive Director Dawn Miller.

If you’re interested in giving early and helping Read Aloud improve the literacy climate in WV, you can:

  • Mail a check to Read Aloud WV, PO Box 1784, Charleston, WV 25326 (this is preferred, as there are no fees associated with your donation and Read Aloud receives the full amount to put towards programs).
  • Click the Donate button above to make a secure donation through Square.

The maximum tax credit allowed in any one year is $100,000. Donors cannot reduce their total state tax bill by more than 50%, but they have five years to use their credits. If you have any questions, contact Read Aloud headquarters at (304)345-5212.

Video Read Aloud Guidelines for Mon. County Volunteers

With possible restrictions again this year for reading aloud in classrooms, we hope you will consider recording yourself doing your normal read aloud to share remotely with teachers and students. Read Aloud of Monongalia County is specifically seeking videos from local volunteers to be shared with local schools through a new Read Aloud of Mon. County YouTube channel. If you are a volunteer from another county who wants to share video read alouds, please email Amanda, our statewide Communications & Development Director, at aschwartz@readaloudwv.org for further guidance.

Here are some guidelines to help you make a successful video:

1. Pick a quiet spot in your home, where your read aloud won’t be interrupted by loud noises or people walking past.

2. Use the best video camera you can find. This may be your phone. If so, set it for Do Not Disturb or place it in Airplane Mode during the recording. Then be sure to turn it horizontal before you start recording.

3. Make sure your camera is stable. If you’re having someone else record you, let them rest their arm on a table or on the back of a chair so the picture doesn’t wobble. Also locate where the camera is on your device so that you can look more toward that area.

4. Follow the rules you normally would use for a read aloud session – practice reading the book at least three times out loud beforehand. You may want to use voices or props (if you are comfortable doing so) to make the story engaging, and remember to show any pictures to the camera!

To share your video with the Mon. County chapter, upload it to this Google drive folder: www.readaloudwv.org/monvideouploads. Please remember to include your name and school in the video title. 

Once successfully uploaded, email Diana Claydon of the Mon. County chapter board at dsclaydon@gmail.com with your school and teacher’s name, as well as the name of the book you recorded. Diana will upload your video to the Mon. County YouTube and Facebook pages, and email you back a link to the video to share with your child’s teacher. Then your teacher can share the video with their classroom!

If you have any trouble making or uploading your video, email Diana at dsclaydon@gmail.com.

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Ten to try: By kids, for kids

We asked our Read Aloud Families participants to send us recommendations for books that they think our readers need to know about, and we were not disappointed! Here are ten of their picks with quotes from each child explaining why they like the title.

Salt

by Maurice Gee | Grades 7th and up

“Like all dystopian books I have read, I can say that this book was good and if anyone asks, I recommend it. The events of this book are real enough that if humans don’t watch it, it could happen in the future. The ability to talk telepathically actually could be the result of a mutation or exposure to radioactive material. And deep salt itself could be the product of nuclear energy and some gem fusing underground.”

— Joshua | Age 14 | Monongalia County


Oh, the Places You’ll Go!

by Dr. Seuss | Grades PreK and up

“This book is really cool. It’s by Dr. Seuss. He is my favorite author.

— Rose | Age 7 | Harrison County


The Wingfeather Saga

by Andrew Peterson | Grades 3rd-6th

“This series is great because it’s a lot of adventure and the children are the main characters.”

— Jamin | Age 8


Flora and Ulysses

by Kate DiCamillo | Grades 2nd and up

“I like how it gives the point of view of the squirrel and how there is a lot of funny stuff in it.”

— Kylie | Age 13 | Brooke County


Ramona Quimby Series

by Beverly Cleary | Grades 3rd-8th

“Good for younger kids to read, but entertaining enough for older kids and even adults to read as well. Told from the perspective of Ramona Quimby, read through the series as she makes various silly mistakes and makes a lot of funny choices. It will keep you laughing out loud to the very end!!!!”

— Ginger | Age 12 | Monongalia County


Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Last Olympian

by Rick Riordan | Grades 4th and up

“It is action-packed and very gripping. Right before the war against the monsters, Percy is determined and says, ‘It’s time to get this war started.’ Everything from the chapter titles to the actual words is gripping. I was pulled in on the very first paragraph. Overall, it’s a very good book.”

— Josephine | Age 10


Island Of The Blue Dolphins

by Scott O’Dell | Grades 4th and up

“It’s always a mystery. You never know what is going to happen next.”

— Maria | Age 11 | Randolph County


The Indispensable Calvin and Hobbes

by Bill Waterson | Grades 4th and up

“Its funny because in one Calvin’s naked and goes down stairs. In another one Calvin has a sled and is going to ride a loopty loop and Hobbes doesn’t want to do it and Calvin says he’s a sissy.”

— Brady | Age 10 | Monongalia County


Piggy Bunny

by Rachel Vail | Grades PreK-2

“Piggy show how you can be anything you want to be.”

— Westen | Age 5 | Greenbrier County


The Wild Robot

by Peter Brown | Grades 3rd-6th

“I like that Roz the Robot learns how to live in the wild and becomes friends with animals. She goes on adventures and is very helpful too.”

— Peyton | Age 10 | Monongalia County


Honorable Mentions

Horton Hears a Who! by Dr. Seuss – anonymous
The Impossible Quest by Kate Forsyth – Kaylie, Age 12
Magic Kitten by Sue Bentley – Jade, Age 10
Wacky Wednesday by Dr Seuss – Jamie & Calvin, Age 6
Rex vs. Edna: The Very First Chicken by Douglas Rees – Zayne, Age 7

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The next normal, whatever it is

Letter from the Executive Director, Dawn Miller

All year, Read Aloud chapters around the state have adapted and adapted again to best serve children, families and schools as conditions have changed. Volunteers read online when possible, by recording when desired, and ramped up book distributions. They handed out books with meals, at special drive-through events and increasingly, as schools have re-opened, first to students, then to guests, at more traditional in-person events.

Many volunteers have expressed interest in reading at programs this summer, they miss their classes so much. We are taking requests from summer programs and matching them with eager volunteer readers. (To arrange yours, contact your local chapter or email stateoffice@readaloudwv.org.)

While readers were cut off from their classrooms and students were cut off from their classroom libraries, Read Aloud doubled up on its usual book distribution efforts. In a good year, Read Aloud gives away 10,000 books and magazines to children around the state. Since Jan. 1, 2020 to this spring, Read Aloud has given out more than 25,000.

As regular volunteers know, Read Aloud is particular in how it gives out books. All of Read Aloud’s efforts emphasize choice because choice is an important factor in motivating children to read for pleasure, just as it is important to adults.

With the restrictions of the past year, volunteers sought and found new ways to engage students, to ask, “What are you reading?”

We adapted classroom “book tastings” where students get to discuss and recommend books. They, their teachers and volunteers may read excerpts. After a chance to “taste” a variety of books, children choose a book to keep.

Thanks to a windfall of books for middle- and high schoolers, we were able to offer a school wide book tasting at Buckhannon-Upshur High School. You can read the details on page 1.

Teachers and volunteers adapted events to their particular needs.

In Jackson County, Chapter President Janet McCauley organized half a dozen classroom book tastings in elementary schools. Teachers in those classrooms chose to lead the events themselves, sampling and reading books with children, and then giving students the opportunity to choose their books.

Just recently, Alban Elementary teacher Allison Stephens and her colleagues invited Kanawha Chapter President Derek Hudson and me to virtually attend their in-person classroom book tastings. Teachers gave children opportunities to preview the books. During the event, the children recommended books to us and to each other. When there was a lull, which was not often, Derek and I were available to build on the conversation about Goldilocks and the Three Dinosaurs by Mo Willems, or The Lost Dinosaur Bone by Mercer Mayer, for example. It was a good time.

Berkeley County reader and chapter member Casey Willson and Kanawha County reader Jackie Thompson both tried a different approach, a “read along.” Every student in their classes one week received a copy of the book they read virtually.

Whatever the approach, all of these efforts give children opportunities to practice what they are learning, to find the words to express their thoughts, and to make connections with each other and with caring adults.

Even when they don’t admit it, children, even teens, are influenced by the adults who care for them. That means if parents, grandparents, teachers, and other mentors make time to discover good things to read and share their discoveries, young people will be influenced.

We will continue the stepped-up book distributions, because nothing beats summer learning loss like reading books for fun.

Looking ahead to fall, we are hopeful that schools will be able to welcome volunteer readers back to their classrooms. We are eager to be there, and plan to adapt to whatever the next normal is.

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All through the grades

In Upshur County, high schoolers find and swap books that keep them reading

By Dawn Miller, Executive Director of Read Aloud West Virginia

Caden Andrick, Cameron Zuliani, Kiara Woods, and Katie Pearson, students at Buckhannon-Upshur High School

For School Library Appreciation Week, Buckhannon-Upshur High School Librarian Angie Westfall put the word out to students each day – there will be free books in the library at the end of the week.

Westfall, a member of the Upshur County Read Aloud chapter board, arranged to have enough books for all 1,000 high schoolers to choose a book to keep.

Back in Charleston, Read Aloud West Virginia Board member Mike Proops and wife Jo Proops, a volunteer, helped prepare and pack books. Becca Revercomb, a retired Kanawha County teacher and a volunteer reader, drove the truckload to Buckhannon.

In advance, Buckhannon-Upshur teachers read some of the books, and were seen doing it. They previewed titles and discussed choices with students. Westfall and her volunteers arranged the merchandise invitingly around the library.

On the day, groups of students, all masked, rotated through the library every 15 minutes to choose a book to keep and to talk about what they enjoy. By the afternoon, 400 books were gone.

“Everyone in the building promotes literacy,” Westfall wrote later. “Pictures of teachers and the books they were reading were put on our closed-circuit TV to add excitement. After the event, students with their choices were also added to the TV lineup.

From left to right: Alisa Compton (Science teacher), Duane Stoeckle (Social Studies teacher), Mindy Dawson (English teacher), Tracey Fluharty-Godfrey (Assistant Principal), Mike Lemley (Science teacher), and Ann Clem (English teacher)

“Teachers said that it was nice to see so many students reading! They were reading everywhere we looked: under trees, on the sidewalk, at lunch, during silent reading in classes, and in the library.”

The event was part of Read Aloud’s increased effort this year to help students get their hands on books that interest them while school and library access have been disrupted.

One student, tipped off that among the choices would be the title she had been wanting most — The Descendants series by Melissa de la Cruz — was particularly looking forward to the event.

Buckhannon-Upshur High School Librarian Angie Westfall dresses for a skit in the library a couple weeks after the book tasting. “The opportunity to promote one of our free books was a must,” she wrote.

But on the day, she was ill and missed school. She returned the following Monday and got her book.

“She was so excited she didn’t know what to say,” Westfall texted the following week. “She skipped on the way out of the library!”

Students were offered fiction and non-fiction, hardback and paperback, many genres, graphic novels and even a few signed copies. Many of the books were bought through First Book, a non-profit that makes high interest books available to schools and literacy organizations. All were provided by Read Aloud donors.

“Readers are well aware of the cost for books,” Westfall wrote. “Some will purchase paperbacks because of the price, but long for the hardback copy.”

“Because of the many choices, students had a difficult time deciding which one to take home.”

At least one group clubbed together, each selecting one of five volumes of Alexandra Bracken’s The Darkest Minds series. Partly set in West Virginia, it is the story of adolescents who survive a plague but who are left with extraordinary mental powers. Adults mistrust and abuse them. The group plans to swap books until they all have a chance to read the four installments plus the additional book of short stories.

“Students are still coming in to get books!” Westfall wrote weeks later. “We are still working to get books in the hands of all our students. Some students have checked out the next book in the series they first selected. Other students have decided to purchase the series, and then also read other books by the same author. In a time of so much technology, our students still enjoy holding a book in their hands! Thank you.”

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A beautiful partnership

Young, autistic illustrator and her former teacher publish a picture book

By Amanda Schwartz

One day, Amee S. Neal gave her teacher at Ashton Elementary, Janet Rowe, a drawing she had made. Amee is autistic and was very shy and reserved at that time, but she loved to draw and read. She was always the Accelerated Reader of the month and year; Janet thinks she may still hold the school record today.

Janet Rowe (middle) and Amee Neal (right) with Janet’s granddaughter and book namesake, Aliera.

“I was honored she would give me drawings. I became friends with her family,” Janet said, describing via email how she taught Amee’s older sister then Amee herself. “I told her, if I ever wrote a book, I would ask her to be the illustrator.”
Janet was an elementary educator for 34 years in Mason County and retired in 2013. After retiring, she began volunteering as a Read Aloud WV classroom reader, reading to her granddaughter’s Kindergarten class and a first-grade class at Martha Elementary. During this time, she was inspired to write her own children’s book, making good on her promise to Amee years before.

“I approached Amee and her mother, Kelly, about going on an adventure to become an illustrator for a story I had written,” Janet said. “I explained, I knew nothing about being an author and getting a book published, but I was going to research it and find out. Amee was thrilled and so was her mother.”

Two years later, Janet came into some unexpected money and used it to self-publish their book – Aliera Wants to be a Monkey – through Covenant Books, Inc. The process took eight months, and both Janet and Amee were a little disappointed in the end to find out that their book would only be available to purchase online, not in stores.

Janet reads Aliera Wants to be a Monkey to granddaughter (and book namesake) Aliera’s class at Martha Elementary in Cabell County.

Even so, they persevered. Amee and Janet began visiting local schools to share their story and promote their book. “I would read the book aloud and Amee would talk about being an illustrator and draw the picture that is on the cover of our book while talking,” Janet explained. “She did a great job and got better and better.” Unfortunately, the COVID-19 pandemic put a halt to these visits, but the pair hopes to resume them next year.

In the meantime, they finished their second book! Janet is currently searching for an agent to represent them, with the hope that this book can be sold in retail stores.

“I would like Amee to be in the spotlight!” she shared. “She does many artistic pieces other than illustrations for me. She wants to use her talents to be an inspiration for others, and I would like to see our book get published so we can be partners all the way through life.”

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Collaborations, events, and book giveaways

Our chapters have been hard at work! Here are some highlights of things they’ve accomplished recently or are working on right now:

Read Aloud of Greenbrier County plans to read aloud for Alderson Elementary students during their deliveries of school grown produce to a local farmer’s market.

Read Aloud of Fayette County is planning a Snuggle & Read event. They are also developing another partnership with a local drug recovery court to provide books to participants and their children.

Read Aloud of Mercer County held a COVID-conscious Snuggle & Read for 117 children at a local library.

Students at Ripley Elementary peruse options at their book tasting event.

Read Aloud of Wood County has a Summer Book Binge coming up at Jefferson Elementary Center, funded through support from Tri-State Roofing & Sheet Metal. Wood County schools are also planning to let volunteer readers return to the classroom in the fall, so the chapter is preparing for that.

Read Aloud of Kanawha County had classroom book tastings for all grades at Alban Elementary.

Read Aloud of Jackson County has a lot of great news! Second graders in the county received personal copies of the first in The Fantastic Frame series, while all the second-grade classrooms received the entire set of five books to complete the series. A volunteer recorded the first book in chapters, which were made available to classrooms for them to follow along. This project was funded through a grant from Jackson County Community Foundation.

Additionally, children of families who received Christmas packages from Epworth Church each received a new book through our Jackson chapter. Book tasting events were held at Ripley, Evans, and Kenna Elementary, including twelve classrooms covering first, second, and fourth grades. And finally, Read Aloud of Jackson Co. provided books for Jackson County Early Explorers to include in two sets of theme-based Read! Play! Grow! packets. This program was so well-received that Jackson County Schools is funding similar packets for students through the summer, and Read Aloud of Jackson County board member Cheryl Miller is helping create those packets for the youngest students.

Girl Scouts of Troop 1774 Madison Boylan, Isabelle Williamson, and Abby Mabley delivered books to Little Free Libraries from Barboursville to Kenova in Cabell County.

Read Aloud of Berkeley County is exploring partnership opportunities for book distributions with their local Boys and Girls Club and Norborne Daycare center. They are also planning to work with a sleepaway camp for children of families that have been impacted by drug abuse to provide books to participants. There may be upcoming opportunities for in-person read alouds for Berkeley county-wide summer school.

Read Aloud of Putnam County is rebuilding a local presence with a recent school-wide book tasting event at Poca Middle School, serving almost 300 students with books of their choice.

Read Aloud of Cabell County volunteer and troop leader Linda Beaver has been working with local Girl Scout Troop 1774 from Community of Grace United Methodist Church to stock Cabell Little Free Library boxes with gently used books.

To find contact information for your local chapter, visit readaloudwv.org/participating-counties.