ReadingRockets

Steps Community Groups Can Take To Help Every Child Become a Reader

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

Not just educational institutions can play a role in preventing illiteracy. Find out what steps organizations can take to help more children learn to read.

Many Americans are energized by the challenge of helping all children learn to read. Committed citizens and public officials are attacking the problem head on, from the nation's capital to statehouses to city halls, from libraries to pizza chains to ballparks.

Their work is informed by mounting research on how to achieve the best results. Activities touch on key issues-training teachers, reading to children, accessing books, and increasing support for parents and child care providers. There is consensus on the need to touch the lives of children who are the hardest to reach – those who are the least likely to enter school ready to read and the most likely to complete third grade as poor readers.

Every member of the community has something to offer a child. Community groups can:

Excerpted from: Every Child a Reader: How Citizens, Public Leaders, and Communities can help. (July, 1999). Start Early, Finish Strong How to Help Every Child Become a Reader. America Reads Challenge, U.S. Department of Education.