The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta schools receive $1M for early reading initiative

College Football Foundation, Peach Bowl Inc. fund effort.

- By Ty Tagami ttagami@ajc.com

Over the next couple of years, 1,500 Atlanta elementary school teachers will get special training to help them help their students learn to read.

Private donors associated with the Peach Bowl will pay the $1 million cost.

“It’ll touch 20,000 students,” Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n said Thursday, in announcing the donation at William Boyd Elementary west of downtown.

Teachers in seven of nine Atlanta Public Schools clusters will get specialize­d training in what is known as the Orton-Gillingham approach, a system developed in the 1930s by a neurologis­t and a psychologi­st to teach students with dyslexia.

The system breaks words into their component sound parts and harnesses sound, sight, touch and body movement. It can also help children without dyslexia.

And Atlanta students need help. More than 80 percent are not proficient readers by the end of third grade, a crucial year. Children who fall behind in reading at this point are likely to lag in other subjects in later grades as the curriculum becomes increasing­ly book-based.

Half the money will come from the College Football Foundation and the other half from Peach Bowl Inc., which has been supporting APS for nearly a decade. President and CEO Gary Stokan said Peach Bowl has given around $6 million to APS to support a variety of programs, including school counseling. Last year, the organizati­on contribute­d money to buy classroom supplies.

The aid is targeted at Atlanta’s poorest neighborho­ods, like the one around Boyd. Latoshia Williams, 42, was in the bleachers of the school auditorium, with a toddler on one knee, a baby in a carrier at her other knee and a little boy climbing on the stair railing. She said the school has taught four of her eight children and three of her eight grandchild­ren to “accomplish the things they need in life, like reading and socializin­g.”

 ?? JOHN SPINK PHOTOS / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? APS Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n and the students wave their books during a song after the Peach Bowl Inc. and the College Football Foundation teamed up to announce a $1 million initiative to improve early childhood literacy among kindergart­en...
JOHN SPINK PHOTOS / JSPINK@AJC.COM APS Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n and the students wave their books during a song after the Peach Bowl Inc. and the College Football Foundation teamed up to announce a $1 million initiative to improve early childhood literacy among kindergart­en...
 ??  ?? Pre-K teacher Antoinette Wiggins takes a selfie with her students before the Peach Bowl Inc. and the College Football Foundation teamed up to announce a $1 million dollar initiative to improve early childhood literacy among kindergart­en through fifth-...
Pre-K teacher Antoinette Wiggins takes a selfie with her students before the Peach Bowl Inc. and the College Football Foundation teamed up to announce a $1 million dollar initiative to improve early childhood literacy among kindergart­en through fifth-...

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