Posts Tagged ‘read aloud’

Written by: Isaiah Cunningham, NHR Tutor and intern.

New Haven Reads is continuing their awesome opportunity for students in K-5th grade to participate in our virtual field trips along with receiving books to add to their at home library. There are still spots available for teachers and students who have already participated in our virtual field trips.

Our virtual field trips are similar to our in-person field trips. Teachers receive up to five books for each student to take home during these virtual field trips. 

Within the 30 minute to an hour period of time our Book Bank Director, Victoria Smith, reads stories to the students via google meet. 

“We are excited to be able to present these field trips to students with an opportunity to receive books as well as an experience to have someone else other than their teachers to read to them,” says Victoria Smith.

There are still plenty of open spots for our virtual field trips! Visit our New Haven Reads website, then click on the program calendar, in which you can sign up for a virtual field trip event. You can also click the following link.


If you’ve visited the New Haven Reads blog or social media recently, you likely noticed the Take a Trip with New Haven Reads project. From February 15th to February 19th, New Haven Reads uploaded a daily video of a staff member reading books and poems written by BIPOC authors. These videos ranged from Aimee Curtis-Travaglini, the Site Director at Bristol Street, reading I Ask My Mother to Sing by Li-Young Lee, to Science Park Site Director Audra Clark reading The Turtle with an Afro by Carlotta Penn.

Eimanuelle (Emma) Pendon, the Assistant Site Director at Dixwell, led this project, seeking to keep our kids engaged over the February break while also highlighting diverse authors.

While planning the readings, she focused on her own background, asking, “What would I have wanted to hear when I was a student growing up? What would have made me feel represented and respected?” 

All too often, authors of color are not given the same platform or opportunities as white authors, and Emma continued to notice this throughout her life, first as a child and now as an Assistant Site Director. Emma wanted to place an emphasis on what our students look like at New Haven Reads, ensuring that our kids are being exposed to books written by authors that look like them, with characters they can relate to and empathize with. 

“I curated a selection of works that featured BIPOC authors, authors who are not always highlighted or recognized in the way that they should be,” Emma explained. “Really, I just wanted what I am doing to be good for the community and for the kids.”

In the end, she couldn’t have been happier with the results. Five New Haven Reads staff members read the books aloud, and these videos have been uploaded to YouTube for anyone to view. We encourage all of our New Haven Reads parents to show these videos to their children, and parents can specifically choose a video of the staff members who their child knows from their tutoring sessions!


Take a trip with New Haven Reads staff around the world to hear poems and books written by BIPOC authors. Each day this we week will be posting a new reading from a staff member along with a fun activity that goes along with the reading.

Friday 02.19.21

The Turtle with an Afro
by Carlotta Penn
Read by Audra

Carlotta Penn founded Daydreamers Press, a multicultural education company focused on children’s book publishing and diversity programming.

Thursday 02.18.21

I Ask My Mother to Sing
by Li-Young Lee
Read by Aimee

Li-Young Lee was born in Djakarta, Indonesia in 1957 to Chinese political exiles. He arrived in the United States in 1964 and eventually attended the University of Pittsburgh, where he began to develop his love for writing.

Activity
Think about the following question:
Where do you think this poem takes place?

Wednesday 02.17.21

Rice From Heaven
by Tina M. Cho
Read by Amanda

Tina M. Cho has written over 200 guided reading books, lesson plans for educational publishers, and two picture books. She wrote Rice from Heaven to teach children about empathy and kindness along with issues in North Korea.

Activity
Enjoy a word search with key words from the story and a map of Korea to color.

Tuesday 02.16.21

Still I Rise
by Maya Angelou
Read by Mary

Activity
Think about the following questions:
-Where does your voice come: your family, your culture, your beliefs, your friends, your experiences?
-What would you like to use your voice for now and in the future?

Monday 02.15.21

Caged Bird
by Maya Angelou
Read by Natosha

Maya Angelou was an American author, actress, screenwriter, dancer, poet and civil rights activist. She is best known for best known for her 1969 memoir, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, which made literary history as the first nonfiction bestseller by an African American woman.

Activity
Learn How to Make an Origami Bird