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Facing declines in reading proficiency, rural libraries step in

Three years ago, Darlene Thomas-Burroughs, branch manager of the Hardeeville Library in the rural town of Hardeeville, South Carolina, heard about a new way that library employees could help kids boost their reading scores. Intrigued, she signed up for the seven-month program, offered by and the federal Promise Zone program. The series featured monthly webinars and networking opportunities meant to help librarians learn to work with the educational system and build relationships with community members—all with the ultimate goal to improve third grade reading levels.





Thomas-Burroughs came away with a host of ideas. She started planning scheduled events at her library for local child care centers, recommending books tailored to what children were learning in school and established a partnership with a local health center to create a mentoring program. Equally helpful, she found, was the access she now had to a community of library employees across the country to provide camaraderie in what can be an isolated field. “There was a lot of good feedback, a lot of good suggestions as to how to meet the challenges with certain situations,” Thomas-Burroughs said.





The same program that so benefited Thomas-Burroughs has launched again in a longer, more intensive form by Berea College. The two-year Rural Library Fellowship, funded by a grant from the and Save the Children, is attempting to boost the capacity of libraries and “activate libraries around third grade reading” according to Dreama Gentry, executive director of Partners for Education at Berea College. “In rural places, the library and the school are the hubs,” Gentry said. “Our focus is really how can libraries accelerate outcomes for kids.”





Nationwide, at . require schools hold back most students who are not reading proficiently by the end of third grade. Research shows if students are not reading at grade level by third grade, they are less likely to graduate high school. The Rural Library Fellowship comes at a time when test scores show many students have lost ground in reading and more are . Educators say many children have lacked access to books at school this year due to pandemic-related protocols.





Some libraries across the country have tried to , offering mobile libraries, outdoor story times and mailing books to children at home. With the launch of the new fellowship program, twenty-two library employees from rural libraries nationwide will receive professional development on topics like brain science and early literacy, as well as coaching on how they can help boost literacy. Fellows will receive a small stipend and project funds to create a literacy-based program in their library. Some examples: updating libraries with culturally appropriate books or interactive activities like a “story walk” that incorporate literary elements through a walking trail.





Darlene Thomas-Burroughs said the professional development is unique in its focus on third grade reading levels. While her library is open to limited capacity, she’s planning for the end of the pandemic when she can roll out more plans and become “the best little rural library in South Carolina.”





Editor’s note: This story led off this week’s Early Childhood newsletter, which is delivered free to subscribers’ inboxes every other Wednesday with trends and top stories about early learning. 





This story about was produced by , a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for the .


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