Posts Tagged ‘volunteer spotlight’

Andrew Nguyen has been volunteering with New Haven Reads for two years at the Bristol Street location. He started volunteering back in 2019. He has always enjoyed working with the younger generation. Andrew states volunteering here has been a privilege because he is able to connect with the amazing children and help play a role in their education. He remembers having someone there for support when he was learning to read as a child and wanted to be there for someone else, because that experience was pivotal to his growth. “Being a volunteer tutor with NHR was a chance for me to give back, even if in the smallest way possible, and that’s important to me because it’s the small interactions that shape us into who we are and who we will become,” Andrew explains.

Something that keeps Andrew coming back is witnessing the growth in the children. “Seeing the moment they learn something new is an awesome feeling,” he says.  Each of his students have helped him become a better teacher and a better human being. He doesn’t hesitate to come back because the site directors make it positive and stand for a mission he fully support.

Thank you to Andrew and all our volunteers for their dedication to our mission!


Ryan Ritraj volunteers at the Dixwell site for New Haven Reads, and has been tutoring with them for four years. His sister taught him how to read as a boy, and he still remembers how it felt to start reading on his own.  Ryan believes that reading is not only a fundamental and important skill, but can also be fun, and he really loves helping people realize this.


Robin has been tutoring with New Haven Reads for four years now, at Willow Street. She heard about NHR from a friend who is an author who had been tutoring for years and loved it. She decided that as soon as her schedule allowed, she would join as well, and she was able to in June of 2017. Robin was a regular classroom teacher who had struggled with supporting students who needed extra help in reading, and she found that NHR was a great program for just that! She loves the supportive and enthusiastic atmosphere of parents, tutors, and children collaborating together to provide the best experience possible for the children. In her own words, “Just walking through the door is an uplifting experience!”


Ilana K. has been tutoring for three years for New Haven Reads at Bristol Street. She had just moved to New Haven after finishing graduate school, and was looking for ways to give back to the community and meet people outside of work. Although she is a scientist by profession, reading has always been her true passion and she believes it is the foundation upon which so many successes are built. After driving past the Bristol Street location, and looking up NHR’s mission online, she found that it was like a match made in heaven! She loves the fact that she gets to share her passion of reading with children while also helping them gain important life skills. There is no one particular reason that Ilana keeps coming back to NHR- she loves all of it! She loves the relationships she can build with the children, as well as hearing about their weeks, sharing in their triumphs, and the amazing staff! The times she tutors are truly the highlight of her week, and she loves that NHR allows her to pursue her dream of sharing literacy skills with the next generation.


Lynne Krupa had been volunteering with a local literacy nonprofit for years, and she loved every minute of it. However, those volunteer hours were missing something that she felt was extremely important: direct interactions with children. One of her friends, a longtime New Haven Reads tutor, always talked about how much she cherished the personal interactions she had at New Haven Reads each week. Finally, in the Spring of 2016 amid the opening of the Willow Street site, Lynne decided it was the perfect time to try it out.

Now, she couldn’t be happier with her decision. “I love to read. I’ve been in a book club for 25 years. To be able to share the love of reading and to help students find that on their own is a wonderful thing,” Lynne explained.

Even the COVID-19 pandemic has not dampened her passion for tutoring. Lynne tutors weekly through Zoom, which she described as a fairly easy transition.

“The distance learning program is actually really nice,” Lynne explained. “There are a few minutes before we are sent to our rooms where we can see Carol and Jess and the other tutors and students, just to say hello and to check in.”

“You have to get more creative sometimes,” she admitted. “But my student and I still have a great connection.”

Oftentimes, distance learning provides some unique, exciting experiences. One of Lynne’s students always talks about her dog, Bella, and during one of the distance learning sessions, her student was able to call Bella over to the camera and finally introduce her to Lynne.

After finishing her stories — covering Hamden, Zoom, Bella, and more — Lynne ended the conversation with a message for others: “I want to encourage people to tutor if they are considering it; you can be part of something that is being used to better all of our children. It can really help someone. And I could be having the worst day ever, and I walk into New Haven Reads and my mood instantly changes. To be able to help students is a pleasure for everyone.”

We at New Haven Reads are so thankful for the time and energy Lynne has dedicated to our organization and our students over the years!


Some people have a passion that they find early in life and maintain forever. For Denise Terry, tutoring is that passion. While attending Albertus Magnus College, Denise tutored students at a Catholic elementary school. During two of her college summers, she worked as a tutor in a residential program for children with dyslexia. After teaching at several different levels, she was trained at The Kingsbury Center in Washington, D.C., and tutored there for five years before moving into full-time teaching again. She kept tutoring even after taking on full-time teaching, working with students through the I Have a Dream program in D.C.

Five years ago, Denise and her husband moved to New Haven, and she started tutoring at New Haven Reads shortly thereafter, in January 2016. “What I found was the best program I’ve ever seen — it is truly amazing,” Denise shared.

Denise’s students would likely describe her in the same way: truly amazing. She gets to know her students and cares deeply about all of them, and her commitment to helping others goes beyond just the hour-long tutoring sessions.

Recently, one of her students, a 6th grader in Hamden, was studying the Civil Rights Movement for class. Denise helped him carry out more research on the topic, and one day he asked her to come and talk to his class about it.

She had some reservations. “I am a white person who had grown up in New York State, so I thought that I might not be the best person,” she admitted. But her student wanted her to, and so she did more than just come to class. She created and brought her own posters and planned a lesson about the Civil Rights Movement, and at the end, she answered questions from the other students in his class.

“It was just wonderful,” Denise said about her day at school.

But even the more ordinary days are wonderful in her view. “The special moments are breakthrough days — when a child who has had trouble settling down, one day just starts to be more attentive,” she shared.

When asked for an example of one of these special moments, several immediately come to her.

“I think of a girl I worked with for a few years. She was a reluctant reader, and usually chose books that were not too challenging, but one day, she chose a biography from the ‘Who Was…’ series,” she recounted. “I was so excited that she was making such a mature choice!”

She thought longer before sharing about another student: “Her parents were immigrants from Egypt. She was my student in the fall of 2016, during the election. She was very frightened, but we were able to talk about how her family was safe, and she began to feel better and better.”

These moments stick with Denise, oftentimes years and years later. Moments like these, though distinctly memorable, are not the only ones that she cherishes, however. Every part of the tutoring process is crucial and meaningful, Denise explained.

“The most gratifying and fulfilling part about tutoring might be watching the child develop their reading skills, but the heart of tutoring for me is when the kids are curious about something we read — or even a word in a workbook — and we can have a conversation about it,” she reflected. “Sometimes, I grab an atlas or a globe so the child can see the geography of what they are learning about — even those little Lexia cartoons, which have the coral reef or Japan!”

After talking about her love for her students and the tutoring process, Denise starts to discuss the program itself. The beauty of the program, she feels, lies in its meticulous organizational structure and its excellent staff.

“From the moment I step into Bristol and am greeted by name, to being reminded who I am working with that day, to computer help, to academic help, to help rearranging space to suit a specific child’s needs — every member of the staff is helpful and knowledgeable, and eager to solve the issue,” Denise explained.

Denise remains consistently humble, attributing her positive experiences and wonderful sessions to her students, to the staff, and to the program. In reality, these components only partially contribute to the success of the tutoring sessions. Through Denise’s responses, it quickly becomes clear that she is the key component. Her empathy, passion, and tenacity create the dozens of special moments, both the extraordinary and the ordinary ones.

She ends the conversation on a modest note when asked about receiving the “Above and Beyond” appreciation from her site staff: “I have only volunteered two times a week, so I don’t consider myself ‘above and beyond’ at all!” We at New Haven Reads disagree. We are all so thankful for Denise’s impressive “Above and Beyond” dedication to our students.


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.