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The Alexander Literacy
Experience, begun by Dr. Arden Post (left), professor of education at
Calvin College, has garnered a literacy award for Gloria Tolbert’s
fourth-grade class at Alexander Elementary School.
"Bats, Buddies and Ben
Carson," an innovative program with an improbable name, couples
reading skills and strategies with internet literacy and is the Great
Lakes Regional winner of the 2003 International Reading Association
(IRA) Presidential Award for Reading and Technology, sponsored by Riverdeep-the
Learning Company.
The award recognizes the
Alexander Literacy Experience or ALEx, a three-year partnership between
Calvin education classes and several Alexander fourth- and fifth-grade
classes, and will provide Alexander Elementary with $500 worth of educational
software.
ALEx began with a grant from
Worldcom through Campus Compact and uses technology to support literacy
in an urban elementary classroom. Students from Post's "Reading
and Language Arts in the Elementary School" class are paired with
reading buddies at Alexander for weekly one-hour sessions.
Post says the program has
changed some over the last three years. "At first I was driven
by technology," she says. "Now we use technology to enhance
literacy, not drive it."
In the program's first year,
the reading pairs researched bats on the internet, using web sites pre-selected
for them. The bat unit taught Alexander students computer and internet
skills while promoting reading. The buddies read a biography of Ben
Carson, an African American neurosurgeon, during the program's second
year. This year the buddies are picking their own books.
Alexander students respond
to their reading and their internet research with writing and drawings.
The written responses range from descriptive paragraphs to journal entries
to diamonte poems, diamond-shaped poems that teach parts of speech.
"It gives the children
a chance to develop multiple talents," Post says.
The Calvin students perform
literacy assessments on their buddies at the beginning and end of the
semester. They also plan lesson sequences and write both daily reflections
on their work and a concluding paper.
Tolbert says the partnership
is invaluable.
"The (Calvin) students
get to know the Alexander students," she says. "They exchange
phone numbers. They get e-mail addresses. They exchange cards."
Wednesdays, Tolbert says,
are a highlight of the week.
"On Wednesdays there
are not too many absentees," she says. "The students are here
because they know their Calvin buddies will be here.”
Post's class has worked with
several of the fourth- and fifth-grade classes over the past 2 1/2 years.
Thus the recent award recognizes the entire project but benefits Tolbert's
class this year, which will receive $500 worth of educational software.
Calvin education professor
Steve Timmermans and Calvin director of pre-college programs Rhae-Ann
Booker together solicited the Worldcom grant and initiated the partnership
between the college and the elementary school. That union also included
Neland Avenue Christian Reformed Church.
While the Worldcom grant
will not be renewed because of that company’s financial difficulties,
the program will continue because of its value to all says Timmermans.
"It’s helped a
church know how to partner with a neighborhood school," he says.
"It helped a neighborhood school meet its goals. And it's helped
a professor take a course and make it technology rich and urban-situated."
~written
by staff writer Myrna Anderson
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