Reading Rockets offers reading comprehension and language arts teaching strategies for kids, and is a free web site for parents and educators
star1 star2 star3

Print this page Print this page

Communities Matter

By: U.S. Department of Education (1999)

Helping children become readers is a team effort. Learn about the roles families, caregivers, teachers, and whole communities play in helping children learn to read in this brief overview.

A bumper sticker states, "If you can read this, thank a teacher." But the latest research indicates the situation is more complex.

Who plays the critical roles in preparing a successful reader?

  • First, as an essential starting point, families can maximize the benefits of parent-child communication from birth.
  • Second, caregivers and preschool teachers can be given training and resources to stimulate emergent literacy.
  • Third, children deserve well-trained teachers who understand reading development, who can pinpoint problems, and who can address them effectively (National Research Council, 1998).

But the consequential task of ensuring that children learn to read should not be left to families, providers, and teachers alone.

Entire communities can rally around their children for literacy success. This means more partnerships between schools and communities. It means greater engagement of private enterprises, colleges, universities, and cultural groups. It means more volunteers and more opportunities for legions of mentors and tutors.

Americans from all walks of life must step forward to win the war against illiteracy.

Unlike children who are struggling to decode words, we as a nation have already unlocked the secrets to better reading. If we start early and finish strong, we can help every child become a good reader.

The momentum is with us for a breakthrough in student reading achievement .The only question that remains is whether we are committed to literacy for every American child.

Excerpted from: The Right Kind of Reading War. (July, 1999). Start Early, Finish Strong: How to Help Every Child Become a Reader. America Reads Challenge, U.S. Department of Education.

Free newsletters

Join Reading Rockets on Facebook!

"A Tale of Two Schools has inspired me to volunteer with a literacy program in my area."
~ Elise W.

AdLit.org
For advice and answers to your questions about a child who is having trouble with reading, send an e-mail to our 'Ask the Experts' service. You'll receive a free, confidential, and personalized response. Ask now.