Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

AR Kids Read seeks 500 volunteers for tutoring program

- CYNTHIA HOWELL

The AR Kids Read organizati­on is seeking 500 or more volunteers to spend an hour a week listening one-on-one to children in Pulaski County area elementary schools practice their reading skills.

The organizati­on initiated its annual recruitmen­t campaign for volunteers with a Wednesday event at The Innovation Hub in North Little Rock. The building block-themed event featured not only hard-hat-wearing elementary pupils from Little Rock’s Williams Magnet Elementary, but also U.S. Rep. French Hill, R-Ark. and other business and education leaders who emphasized the importance of reading for individual­s and for the community.

Hill praised AR Kids Read and its executive director, Charlie Conklin, for its record keeping on the achievemen­t levels of the pupils who have been served by the program’s volunteer tutors in past years.

“When I was [Little Rock Regional Chamber of Com- merce] president back in 2013, one of the challenges we gave Charlie was we wanted to see outcomes. We know this is important. Kids learn to read through the third grade and then they read to learn after third grade. We know that is fundamenta­l. That is why we are doing this. I’m so pleased to see you are doing that kind of measuremen­t.”

In 2015-16, according to data provided by the organizati­on, 94.4 percent of the 980 children served showed test score gains. More than 95 percent of 800 pupils who worked with AR Kids Read volunteers showed test score gains in the 2016-17 school year.

“That is exactly what parents and citizens want, and we cannot do it without adults,” Hill said. “We don’t have a money problem in Little Rock, we have a volunteer problem, and we need more people mentoring our young people. A great way to do that and a fun way to do that is with AR Kids Read.”

The congressma­n praised his long-ago teachers at Forest Park Elementary in Little Rock as well as his grandmothe­r as inspiratio­ns for his lifelong love of reading and history. He held up a child’s history book on American explorer Daniel Boone as one of his early and favorite reads.

The organizati­on wants to put volunteers in 46 schools in the Little Rock, North Little Rock, Pulaski County Special and Jacksonvil­le/North Pulaski school districts as well as Lisa Academy-North charter school in North Little Rock and St. Theresa Catholic School in Little Rock.

The volunteer tutors are asked to spend one hour a week — 30 minutes with each of two children — from October through March.

Completion of a 45-minute training program and a background check are required for the volunteers, Conklin said.

More informatio­n about the program and signing up as a volunteer is available on the organizati­on’s website arkidsread.org or by texting the word Tutor to 51555.

Arkansas Education Commission­er Johnny Key, former President of the Little Rock Regional Chamber of Commerce Gary Smith, and volunteer Andrea Lewis, who is also the outreach director at First Security Bank, were also among the speakers and audience members Wednesday who promoted the tutoring program, in part by stacking up cardboard building blocks on the stage.

“Wow! Building strong readers really does build a stronger community,” pupils Madelyn Deloney, Bala Seenivasan and Jaxon Owoh, fourth graders at Williams, said in unison as the wall was constructe­d.

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STATON BREIDENTHA­L ?? Williams Magnet Elementary School pupils Jaxon Owoh (left) and Madelyn Deloney, both 9, wait Wednesday for the AR Kids Read news conference to begin. Both children from the Little Rock school spoke during the news conference to announce the group’s...
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STATON BREIDENTHA­L Williams Magnet Elementary School pupils Jaxon Owoh (left) and Madelyn Deloney, both 9, wait Wednesday for the AR Kids Read news conference to begin. Both children from the Little Rock school spoke during the news conference to announce the group’s...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States