Sunday, June 24, 2018

Literacy – Spanning the US :: Fairbanks AK :: San Benito Co CA :: Greenfield MA :: Lincoln Co NM


Literacy: Spanning the U.S.     

Air Guard recruiter’s ESL experience inspires students at Literacy Council
dvidshub: 5.10.2018 by Airman 1st Class Shannon Chace 168th Wing

The classroom is small, but organized. A clean white table is centered with several chairs around it. A white board takes up most of the back wall and several hanging maps cover the rest of the walls. There are two computer stations, and leaning books fill a small shelf in the back corner.

When Carlos Rosario, a tutor with the Literacy Council of Alaska, walks into the room he has a smile on his face so big his eyes are almost squint shut. He says hello to the student and smoothly transitions to speaking in Spanish.

The student is Yaniris Dubose. She is originally from the Dominican Republic and came to the literacy council looking for help to attain her GED diploma. After a staff member compared her goals and needs with the volunteers available she was paired with Rosario.

Tech Sgt. Rosario, a recruiter with the 168th Wing, Alaska Air National Guard, began volunteering as a tutor with the literacy council in 2014. His goal was to help other people and also to improve himself.

“When I first came here one of the reasons why I wanted to be a tutor is to make myself better,” said Rosario, “I had to make lesson plans and I had to research what I was teaching.”

The literacy council is a non-profit educational institution that provides classes and tutoring for adults. They offer a variety of educational assistance including English as a second language, GED, and citizenship.  READ MORE >>

Friends of the Library teaches adults how to read
BenitoLink: 5.12.2018 by John Chadwell

It’s not necessarily true that everyone who walks into the San Benito County Free Library actually knows how to read.

Friends of the Library, a nonprofit organization whose volunteers often lobby for the library at government meetings and hold fundraising events, provides reading tutors for adults who are either illiterate or need to improve their reading comprehension skills for a specific goal.

County Librarian Nora Conte said the Adult Literacy Program is a feature at many libraries throughout the state. Originally, she said, the program was offered at the San Juan Bautista Library. Soon after coming to the county library in 2006, she applied for state funding. While the amount varies, she said it ranges from $16,000 to $22,000 each year.

“That pays for a staff person to run it and we purchase books and materials so individuals can practice their reading and writing skills,” Conte said.

The head librarian said there are around 18 volunteers to help with the program. A volunteer must first read a three-hour guide online to be prepared to instruct those who sign up for the program. She said some of the volunteers are retired teachers. Most are at a point in their lives, she said, that they want to give back to the community.

Retired teacher Rebecca Salinas, 13-year member and treasurer of the nonprofit group, is currently working with her fifth student to up their literacy skills. Her love of libraries goes back to when she was a girl growing up poor in East Los Angeles.

“The one thing that opened to us becoming more educated and more Americanized was the library,” Salinas said, crediting libraries for how well she and her siblings have done. “One of my brothers was the president of Sacramento State. Another brother was the CEO for a nonprofit corporation that weatherizes low-income homes.”

Salinas recounted how her father was always reading and his love of books influenced her and her siblings. As soon as Salinas and her brothers discovered the library, they spent many hours there. She eventually became the representative of her East Los Angeles neighborhood library to the California State Library.  READ MORE >>

Literacy Project wins Arts & Humanities Award
Recorder: 5.14.2018

The Literacy Project is one of four recipients of the prestigious New England Public Radio Arts and Humanities Award for 2018.

The Literacy Project is based in Greenfield with approximately 300 students studying in its classrooms in Greenfield, Orange, Amherst, Northampton and Ware. Adult students study reading, writing, math, social studies and science to prepare for the High School Equivalency Exam, formerly known as the GED, now called the HiSET.

“Along the way, as they study and work in our classrooms, they fall in love with reading and writing,” said Judith Roberts, executive director of The Literacy Project. “The Literacy Project has long believed in connecting literacy with literature. We all share the capacity to be uplifted by the power of poetry, prose and the arts, yet our students are nontraditional participants in the world of arts and humanities. We are deeply honored to have NEPR recognize The Literacy Project students and teachers for the work we do.”

The Literacy Project has been teaching reading and writing and preparing adult students in the Pioneer Valley for the high school equivalency exam for 34 years.  READ MORE >>

Convincing adults to seek help for reading, writing and mathmatic skills can be tough
Ruidoso News: 5.14.2018 by Dianne L Stallings

Lining up volunteers to help with the adult literacy program is less difficult than persuading some grown men and women to acknowledge they need help, Robin Gilton, Lincoln County Adult Literacy coordinator told village councilors.

Many adults who struggle with reading, writing and mathematics are reluctant to ask for help, she said last week. She began her presentation by thanking the village for allowing the program to be housed in the Ruidoso Public Library, where she has received help and resources.

“It’s a great place for our nonprofit program,” she said, introducing members of the program board including Councilor Joe Eby, then encouraging anyone interested in serving on the board to contact her.

A need for literacy services exists in Lincoln County and on the neighboring Mescalero Apache Reservation, she said. The program offers basic literacy service to adults in reading, writing and mathematics below grade six, aimed at improving the skills of rural, ethnic, underserved or disadvantaged adults.  READ MORE >>

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