Last week we asked you, “What do books, art, servant leadership, and diversity have in common?” Well, the answer is an amazing partnership between READ USA, the Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens, and the Rotaract Club of Jacksonville's Beaches that we are announcing today!
Our three organizations have come together to create a unique new series of Read Alouds, where adults read diverse children’s books on video for children to listen, learn, and follow along at their own pace.
The 10-video series, accessible via our YouTube channel, provides children with a variety of stories that reflect different cultures and ethnicities. The purpose behind the series is to help children develop an appreciation of self by being able to experience diverse books featuring people that look like them, while also experiencing the unique artistic and cultural resources available at the Cummer Museum. Ten members of the Beaches Rotaract conducted the Read Alouds at the Cummer Museum and discussed how each of the stories are related to the artworks and gardens featured in the videos.
“The arts and gardens at the Cummer Museum provide visitors with access to beauty and culture as well as a variety of stories from around the world, found in each artwork and landscape,” said Kim Kuta Dring, Director of Learning & Engagement at the Cummer Museum of Art & Gardens. “Pairing artworks and gardens with diverse stories that are read aloud by community volunteers is a powerful way to engage children and families in ‘reading’ artworks. It is our hope that this series of videos will encourage families to visit the Museum to closely explore and talk about art and to explore the stories that surround them every day – in their homes, neighborhoods, schools, and other places they frequent.”
The Beaches Rotaract members who participated in the Multicultural Literacy series and the stories they read aloud include:
Click here to watch this unique new Read Aloud series and for past Read Alouds on our website.
Yesterday, our CEO Dr. Rob Kelly and one of our amazing teen tutors, Liano, were on News4Jax’s Morning Show to talk with Melanie Lawson about READ USA’s Literacy Tutoring program, tutors’ experience in the program, and our urgent need to hire more than 50 teen tutors to reach our goal of 220 tutors for the coming Spring semester.
Watch the segment here:
We are so thankful to Melanie and News4Jax for welcoming us on The Morning Show, and our special gratitude goes to Liano (and his mom!) for taking the time to join us and share his experience.
Do you know of any teens looking for work this spring? Have them apply NOW!
Training for the Spring semester starts next week, so please encourage interested teens to apply TODAY at www.readusainc.com/apply.
Here are the details:
Read more about our Literacy Tutoring program here.
Illustrated by Ted Rand
Surely to become a Christmas classic, this story captures the quiet, serene tradition of one family at Christmas time. Walking through a dimly lit forest, our host family brings gifts to adorn the tree for the animals. They leave surprises to include tangerines, sunflower seed balls, and popcorn strings. Giving another look at the true meaning of giving at Christmas, the narrative teaches us that every creature is important and deserves our care. When you reflect on your traditions this year, which of those can be attributed to the giving spirit that lifts the most vulnerable among us?
Submitted by Tabetha Cox, Tutoring Program Director
“Comprehension is not about answering those literal questions at the end of a story, chapter, or textbook selection. Comprehension is not about spitting out facts and filling in blanks. Comprehension is about understanding. Reading is thinking.”
-Stephanie Harvey
This week we will be looking at part of the Comprehension component of reading and ways to help students grow in this area.
Comprehension can be compared to an intricately woven tapestry. Skills and strategies required for comprehension are connected to each other, creating a masterpiece of thinking about text. We will spend several weeks looking at comprehension due to the depth and breadth of this strategy.
Comprehension is part of a System of Strategic Actions that readers develop over time with instruction and practice. Fountas and Pinnell (2017) developed this illustration to depict the plethora of skills and strategies a reader simultaneously uses as they work to read and comprehend text. The first section of the diagram we will look at is “Thinking Within the Text.” Students need to notice and use the information that is directly stated in the text. While a student is reading, many processes are taking place. They are searching for and using information by thinking about what the text means, if the language sounds right, how the words sound and how they look. The reader is monitoring and self-correcting by thinking about their understanding and correcting errors they notice when they realize it is not making sense. Readers are not only solving words using a range of strategies to recognize and take apart words, and understanding word meaning, but they are also reading at a good rate, integrating phrasing, pausing, intonation and stress in the appropriate places. Whether the student reads fluently, or not, is a window into their comprehension. A students’ comprehension becomes quite obvious when they read a text aloud. Do they read with emphasis in the right place? Do they read the punctuation to emphasize meaning? Does their voice and inflection reflect understanding of the text? Readers also adjust their reading by acting in flexible ways to solve problems or to adapt to the structure of a specific genre. Kids need to know how different types of books work! They need to think about how they read informational text, for example a biography, different than they might read a narrative text. Additionally, while reading within a text, a reader needs to be able to remember important information and carry it forward as they build understanding of the plot.
The notion that a reader implements each of these behaviors simultaneously and rapidly, is monumental. Each of the behaviors mentioned above is dependent upon and a contributing factor to comprehension. The reader who is not comprehending will not be able to successfully apply the strategies and without the mentioned skills will not be able to comprehend well.
Readers need to use all the sources in the text to notice when they don’t understand and work to solve the problem. Most importantly, a reader needs to understand whether a text is making sense or not. Skilled comprehension is knowing when a text doesn’t make sense and knowing how to search for clues to clarify meaning.
So here are some ways to build comprehension skills in the Thinking Within the Text area:
You can read more about this topic here: https://www.readingrockets.org/helping/target/comprehension