Author Archive

Volunteer Location: Bristol Street

Years Tutoring: 8 months

When and why did you first start volunteering at NHR?                                                                   I started volunteering in September 2019. As I looked for volunteering opportunities in New Haven, the New Haven Reads program offered a compelling way to contribute to our city while interacting with a group of young people that I had not interacted with in a LONG time. As an ESL student who also received literary tutoring, this opportunity felt refreshing and important.

What keeps you coming back?                                                                                                                While I have loved so many aspects of working with NHR, I have to say the students have been the most rewarding. Their youthful energy, willingness to learn and excitement towards interacting with tutors and NHR staff has been inspirational. In my work and personal life, it’s often easy to forget these innocent, important perspectives. Every week, I come to NHR and feel re energized by these students’ bright attitudes.  


We want to say THANK You to our volunteers!

April is National Volunteer month and our NHR team made a video for our volunteers to thank them for all they do! With out them our program wouldn’t be possible, they are the heart and soul of our program! Click here to watch the video!


Book Distribution
There are two ways that you can help us!
 
Volunteer!
We need volunteers to collect books from our Book Bank and distribute the books at the meal distribution locations in New Haven. Training, masks, and gloves will be provided. Social distancing rules will apply and the books will be pre-packaged in bags. There will be no contact with families.To volunteer or find out more, please contact our Book Bank Team here.
 
Donate your gently used children’s books!
We will need over 5,000 books for this 8 week program and we will not have enough books to meet this demand in our current collection. If you have children’s books that you would like to donate, please contact our Book Bank and make an appointment to drop them off. We will store them for the appropriate amount of time before distributing them.Make an appointment for a no contact drop off here.
 
At this difficult time, it is important for families to have access to books and we are so happy to be working in collaboration with our partners and our community to make sure that books are getting into the hands of children who need them!Connect with us on our social media channels to keep up to date with the latest developments! Thank you for your support!

Find the e book here at New Haven Public library 


As parents and caregivers are homeschooling at the moment, the NHR Education Team would like to share some of the resources we have found useful to support literacy learning at home. Please click the link below for more support and practice for your child. Good luck and be well!

Literacy Resources


Dear NHR Family,

The Coronavirus is impacting our lives in ways that we could never have imagined a few weeks ago. I hope that you and your families are managing well. Because of the current circumstances, we cannot deliver our regular program as we would like, but our mission “to share the joy and power of reading” remains and our 550+ students continue to be our priority.

As you know, all of 500+ students come to our program reading below grade level. They cannot afford to go weeks without literacy support, let alone months. They thrive at New Haven Reads thanks to the incredible support of our dedicated corps of volunteers and our highly structured and successful program.

It is critical that our students receive literacy support even though they are not in school.  Our team is currently calling all of our families and talking to them about what they need and how we can help. We plan to set up online, one-on-one tutoring for our students in the very near future and we will be contacting our tutors to ask them to help us with that. Our talented team is working to tweak our program to make it successful online to ensure we maximize this time for our students. In this way, we will continue to support our students and their families as we adapt our learning model. 

We look forward to the day when we open our doors and hear students and tutors laughing over a good book, see our book bank filled with field trip classes again, and smile with delight as our kindergartners are sounding out their first words. 

As one of our tutors once told us, “New Haven Reads is our community at its best!” We look forward to bringing together our community online during this crisis and supporting our wonderful students and their families. In the meantime, we know that we can count on you, our treasured supporters, to be with us every step of this journey as we work towards that day!

With love and affection,

Kirsten Levinsohn

Executive Director

Kirsten@test.newhavenreads.org


Hello,

You are no doubt well-aware of the concern of the Coronavirus spreading to New Haven.  We want you to know that here at NHR, we are bumping up our usual cleaning procedures by trying to disinfect each reading station every hour.  We also encourage folks to use Purell (as long as supplies last!) or wash hands, as needed.

Additionally, we ask parents to please keep students home if they are showing any signs of sickness. Tutors should also remain home if they are feeling unwell. 

As always, we appreciate your cooperation and support.

Thank you,

Hayley and Kirsten

Education Director and Executive Director, New Haven Reads

_____________

Hola,

Seguro que Usted esta muy consciente de la preocupación de que el Coronavirus se extienda a New Haven. Queremos que sepa que aquí en NHR, estamos mejorando nuestros procedimientos de limpieza habituales al tratar de desinfectar cada estación de lectura cada hora. También animamos a la gente a usar Purell (¡mientras duran las reservas!) O lavarse las manos, cuando sea necesario.

Además, les pedimos a los padres que por favor mantengan a los estudiantes en casa si muestran signos de enfermedad. Los tutores también deben permanecer en casa si no se sienten bien.

Como siempre, agradecemos su cooperación y apoyo.

Gracias,

Hayley y Kirsten

Directora de Educación y Directora Ejecutiva, , New Haven Reads

 

 


Read Across America is an initiative on reading created by the National Education Association that began in 1997. One part of the project is National Read Across America Day, an observance in the United States, held on the school day closest to March 2nd. Here at New Haven Reads we celebrate the entire week by doing engaging activities at all four of our locations. 


Summer’s arrival can often present a challenge to young and growing readers. Without assignments and easy access to books, students may not be motivated to read regularly during the summer months!

This difficulty has very real consequences for students’ efforts to become independent and confident readers.

Students who do not read during the summer lose between two and three months of reading development.

By the 5th grade, this loss amounts to two years of foregone development and a significant disadvantage as they go on to middle and high school.1 In other words, reading development regresses if students stop reading over the summer. Educators call this decline the summer slide.

So how can parents and mentors inspire students to read when there are so many tantalizing competing activities to do? Here are New Haven Reads’ top five tips for preventing summer slide!

1. Plan a trip to your local public library.

Giving students the opportunity to explore a variety of genres is essential for selecting the right books. Plan a trip to the local library that the student can look forward to! By accompanying them and helping them check out books, parents and mentors can help students feel responsible for their reading. Of course, the library is not the only place to find books students will love; visit the NHR Book Bank! Students can find fantastic, FREE books at all reading levels that they can keep.

2. Select four to six books that the student finds interesting.

Reading four to six books during the summer maintains and improves a student’s reading level in preparation for the upcoming school year.2 However, it is important for students to select books that genuinely interest them—otherwise, they may not actually read the books! In addition, books should be at an appropriate reading level so the student can read without frustration. To find appropriate reading level books, read several pages with the student to determine if they can read without long pauses or frequent distraction.

3. Read something every day.

It’s not necessary to set a strict schedule or outline exactly what students will read every day of summer. However, students should take advantage of reading opportunities all around them! This can be a part of other fun summer activities. As they visit parks, museums, zoos, and even stores, encourage them to read signs and share what they learn. When they don’t feel motivated to read from their selected summer books, encouraging them to read casually in this way makes reading a regular part of their daily routine.

4. Read aloud.

In the course of reading both their chosen books and other material, invite students to read aloud, and in turn read aloud to them. This increases students’ engagement and confidence and also fosters reading comprehension if followed up with questions about what they have read. Help them with their pronunciation and pace as they read aloud, and compliment them often!

5. Invest in the right kind of screen time.

It is easy to think of technology as competition to reading, but students’ time in front of a screen is not necessarily harmful. Students and parents can use computers, tablets, and phones to access reading material and educational games. As long as recreational uses of technology don’t keep students from reading, there is no reason to restrict such activities absolutely. The key is to strike a productive and enjoyable balance.

1 Children’s Literacy Initiative, “5 Tips for Preventing Summer Slide

2 BookSource, “Stop Summer Slide with Summer Reading


Here at NHR, June Recess just ended and the six-week Summer Session is underway. Although programs continue moving forward, we want to take these two weeks to focus on some of the highlights from the 2018-2019 school year. First up: student feedback and test results!

The CORE Test

Each year we measure the efficacy of the tutoring program through the Consortium on Reading Excellence (CORE) test, which measures three areas of literacy: phonics, high-frequency words, and independent reading level. All 1st, 2nd, and 3rd grade student test twice a year, and NHR staff work with volunteers and parents to individualize skills practice based off of the results.

Key Results:

146 students took the test

100% of students tested improved in at least one area of reading

94% improved their phonics score

70% improved their high-frequency word score

72% increased their independent reading level by at least one grade level

27% increased their independent reading level by two or more grade levels

29% of students improved in every area

In addition to these results, each 2nd and 3rd grade student gets tested on reading comprehension. This year, 78% of them improved their score!

The Student Survey:

Although the CORE test results provide staff with valuable information, each year we also conduct a student survey in order to understand how our students feel about tutoring. This year, 375 students filled out the survey. Of those 375, 85% said that NHR has helped them be a better reader, and 91% said that they feel welcome at NHR.

In Their Own Words:

The best part about New Haven Reads is… “Just coming and feeling like it’s family.

The best part about New Haven Reads is… “I feel like I am safe here.”

I tell my friends that: New Haven Reads is awesome. It helps kids learn and it’s fun. What you do in Lexia and reading, and workbook makes you proud.

I tell my friends that: “It’s the best place ever…New Haven Reads helps a lot of my friends, and I  thank New Haven Reads. It’s the best place ever to learn.”

If you had to describe New Haven Reads in one word, what would it be? Excellent (I love it. I love it. I love it.) 😉

Our students’ experiences and accomplishments mean everything to us. As the summer begins, we thank all of the dedicated volunteers and parents who supported the students this year, and we congratulate our readers even more for all their hard work and improvement!