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Helping Mississippi Read
April 06, 2005
The
state of Mississippi, while home to generations of literary giants, ranks at
or close to last of all state literacy rates and the dollar amounts spent on
each pupil in its public school system. High poverty levels and a lack of funding
for remediation, materials, and teacher training all contribute to the critical
problem.
In 2000, the Barksdale family of Mississippi
decided that the reading skills in its home state were unacceptable and became
determined to improve them. A donation of $100 million by family members resulted
in the founding of the Barksdale Reading Institute (BRI) in Oxford, Mississippi.
The Institute has significantly improved the reading skills of children in kindergarten
through third grade in 70 low-performing Mississippi public schools, as well
as the pre-literacy levels of children from birth.
Claiborne Barksdale, formerly a corporate lawyer,
is the CEO of the Barksdale Reading Institute. In February, Barksdale addressed
the ABA Board of Directors as part of the association's ongoing environmental
scanning efforts to examine issues, such as literacy, that might significantly
affect the book industry. BTW recently had the opportunity to talk to
Barksdale about the Institute and its efforts.
The funding for the Barksdale Reading Institute
came from Jim and Sally Barksdale, Claiborne's brother and sister-in-law. Jim Barksdale, the former president and chief executive officer of Netscape Communications Corporation,
had formed the Technology Network, with
several former business colleagues. Their new venture was designed to pool resources
to help technology-oriented companies identify and retain the best talent. This
led Barksdale and his wife to begin their own research on the state of education
in America to see how they could best use their resources to improve education-related
problems.
The Barksdale Reading Institute formed partnerships
with the Mississippi Department of Education, Mississippi public schools, and
the state's public universities that have led to systemic reform in the way
reading is being taught to children across Mississippi, Barksdale explained.
To participate in the Barksdale Reading Institute,
"schools must demonstrate a need [according to test scores] and then formally
apply for the grants, and agree to implement the changes over the next four
years," said Barksdale. "More than 22,000 Pre-K through third-grade
children are involved in this implementation, plus several thousand children
attending daycare and Head Start programs that feed into the Institute's selected
schools. Over 1,100 public school teachers are involved in the implementation
along with hundreds of daycare providers and Head Start teachers.
"Our primary goal is to improve literacy
skills among participants so that children will leave the third grade reading
fluently at grade level. To accomplish this, schools must implement appropriate
assessment and reading instruction in grades K through three. The Institute
is also working to increase parental involvement in the schools and strengthen
the role of the principal."
After thorough assessments of the students' reading skills, the Institute provides
extensive teacher training prior to and throughout the course of the year, both
in school and off site. A BRI master teacher visits each school weekly. Hundreds
of paid and volunteer tutors work with Pre-K through grade-three children to
enhance fluency and comprehension skills. Home/school coordinators also provide
four hours of tutoring per day. The Home/school coordinators supervise Parent/Family
Centers that have been established at most of the BRI's schools. There, parents
can check out materials designed to address specific reading problems their
children are experiencing. Early childhood educators, including private and
Head Start workers, receive training from BRI's staff to improve PreK children's
concepts of print and phonological awareness.
As of September 2004, approximately 600,000
books had been given to the children in BRI schools as a result of BRI dollars
and matching grants from Reading Is Fundamental, and the First Book program.
To learn more about the Barksdale Reading Institute, visit www.msreads.org/. --Nomi
Schwartz
Topics: News - Bookselling, People, Literacy/Reading,
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