Tutor John Haig and Charles Winston

Tutor John Haig and Charles Winston

 

Tutor David Cook and Angel Amos

Tutor David Cook and Angel Amos

We have received TABE test results for 8 of our out-of-school youth in the Youth Health Works program. Of the students who have been retested, 7 of the 8 students showed improvements of a grade level or higher in their reading and/or math scores, and 2 of the students, Angel Amos and Charles Winston, each improved their reading by 2 Educational Functioning Levels! Each Functioning Level covers 2 grade levels.

  • Carlester Bert: Chosen for an internship at John Hopkins hospital in Baltimore.
  • Diymond Mosely: Passed the Reading portion for her GED.
  • Dillyn Fitzgerald: Accepted into the CVS Pharmacy Technician training program.
  • Quaeisha Cook: Accepted into the Medical Office Assistant Training Program at Anne Arundel Community College.
  • Lajuan Young: Chosen for the Clatanoff Temporary Position at Arundel Medical Center.
Tutor Perinaaz Gandhi and Carlester Bert

Tutor Perinaaz Gandhi and Carlester Bert

A tremendous thanks goes out to the 35 volunteer tutors and assessors involved with this out-of-school youth program this year. Your steadfast commitment and dedication to these students has been inspirational.

Post image for July 2015 Message From the Director
Lisa Vernon, Executive Director

Lisa Vernon, Executive Director

Happy July!

If you would like to become a literacy or math tutor, now is your chance! Our next 2 day tutor training, scheduled for September 26th & October 10th, 9:00 am to 4:00 pm at Woods Memorial Presbyterian Church in Severna Park, will include both Basic Literacy and English Language Learner instruction. We have a class size limit of 35 so if you, or someone you know, would be interested in attending this training, please email director@aaclc.org, or call 301-523-6750 as soon as possible to reserve a seat.
Best regards,
Lisa Vernon, Executive Director

Anne Arundel County Literacy Council

Post image for Introducing Christine Harrison: AACLC Database Administrator

As Database Administrator, I am the least visible member of the Literacy Council staff. But please know that each of you are very clear in my sight from the day you contact the Literacy Council until the day you end your relationship with us.

Tutors: I know that you are amazed at the determination and perseverance of your students, that you are alternately proud, concerned, frustrated and joyous at their progress. I know about the connections that you have developed with your students as mentor and often, as friend. I know how much you have grown through your experience of being a tutor.

Students: I know that you have, for the first time, read a book to a young child; that you have prepared a meal by following instructions you read in a cookbook; that you breezed through Laubach 2 but are stuck on lesson 4 in Laubach 3; that you passed your driver’s test; that you are struggling with the “ng” sound; and that you faithfully meet your tutor each week and work on the challenges of the day’s lesson.

I may not have met you, but I am incredibly proud of all that you, as members of this organization, continue to accomplish. And I look forward to another year of reading about how frustrated, hardworking, shy, determined and totally awesome you are as you faithfully pursue the often snail-paced process of improving lives.

Christine Harrison
Database Administrator

Post image for Youth Health Works Update: Summer 2015

Forty dedicated, trained Literacy Council volunteers have assessed and tutored 19 out-of-school youth at the Annapolis Phoenix Academy this year. These students, ages 17-21, have improved their reading, writing and math skills during this time, several are making good progress towards achieving their GED, and others have received internship and job training through this program.

Post image for New Tutor Resources: Summer 2015

PBS Literacy Link – Information for adult learners and educators using online interactive materials and computer technologies with videos. 

Thinkfinity Literacy Network (Verizon) – Free downloadable lesson plans and resources.

Vocabulary.co.il – Vocabulary word search, crossword puzzles, hangman, quizzes, match games, and word jumbles.

Discovery Education Puzzlemaker – Create and print customized word search, crisscross, math puzzles and more.

5 Minute English – short and easy explanations and exercises.

Post image for Student Progress Report: Marc

Last year, we spotlighted one of our students, Marc, and his dedicated tutor Al Odierno. You can read about Marc and why he came to AACLC for help in improving his reading skills: CLICK HERE for that story. In this post, Al Odierno and Marc give us an update on Marc’s progress.

“Working with the Literacy Council is worth the work and the time.  We all struggle with something–for some of us it’s reading.  To anyone considering being tutored I would tell them it’s well worth the effort.”  ~ Marc

Tutoring One Year On

It’s now been a little more than a year since my student Marc and I began working together.  During this time Marc has gone from a second-grade to a fifth-grade reading level–but this process didn’t happen seamlessly or overnight.

A year ago Marc was often late to our tutoring sessions, frequently forgetting his study materials. But just last week when I was 5 minutes late he was waiting for me in the library parking lot with an “…And where have you been?” knowing grin on his face. We’ve both learned so much from each other; early on our conversations were brief and monosyllabic. More recently, though, after reading news articles on current issues together, we share extensive give and takes, one literate person to another. Marc has emerged as a confident, engaged, clear-thinking reader and conversationalist.

In a year we have both learned that patience reaps big payoffs. Even heading out into the cold winter darkness to meet at the library after working at a job all day long doesn’t feel burdensome. So many good things have developed during our time together that we plan to continue our study sessions long into the future.

~ Alfred Odierno

 

Post image for June 2015 Message From The Director

We did it again!

2015-top-rated-awards-badge-embedWe have won the 2012, 2013, 2014, and 2015 Top-Rated Great Nonprofit award, as well as the GuideStar Exchange Seal, demonstrating the Literacy Council’s commitment to transparency. Please take a moment to check out our 86 reviews at http://greatnonprofits.org/org/anne-arundel-county-literacy-council-inc. If you haven’t left a review yourself, please consider sharing your good opinion of our organization.

 

More good news

The Literacy Council has also received the Martha Wood Leadership Award from the Annapolis City Council and the Housing Authority City of Annapolis (HACA) for tutoring 25 of HACA’s residents over the past 2 years. Thanks to the dedication of our tutors and the hard work of these students, many are preparing to take their GED, while others are working to improve language arts competency, thereby raising their level of self-sufficiency.

Best regards,

Lisa Vernon
Executive Director
Anne Arundel County Literacy Council
301-523-6750 (cell)

2015 Top-rated nonprofits and charities
Volunteer. Donate. Review.

Our supporters have spoken. Thanks to your votes, we’ve been nominated for a spot on the 2015 Top-Rated List! ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY LITERACY COUNCIL INC is one of the first nonprofits to be listed on their leaderboard here. We’ll be featured on their site, in their 2015 Top-Rated List, and distributed to media and corporate foundations. All we need to do is maintain an overall average of 3.5 stars to stay on the list.

Post image for 5 Compelling Facts About High School Dropout Rates

These alarming statistics validate how critical our work is here at Anne Arundel County Literacy Council. We know we’re changing lives. Let’s not forget that when we help students of any age finish high school, we’re impacting our whole society in a positive way!

  1. Every year, over 1.2 million students drop out of high school in the United States alone. That’s a student every 26 seconds – or 7,000 a day.
  2. About 25% of high school freshmen fail to graduate from high school on time.
  3. The U.S., which had some of the highest graduation rates of any developed country, now ranks 22nd out of 27 developed countries.
  4. A high school dropout will earn $200,000 less than a high school graduate over his lifetime. And almost a million dollars less than a college graduate.
  5. In the U.S., high school dropouts commit about 75% of crimes.
Post image for Book Review: <i>The A To Z Of Everyday Things</i> By Janice Weaver

Dear Readers,

Join me here for a monthly book review from the best of modern literature and the classics. For my first selection, I have chosen a little light reading, something informative and amusing, to wile away the cold winter evenings by the fireside.

BOOK REVIEW: “THE A TO Z OF EVERYDAY THINGS” by Janice Weaver, 2004

If you enjoyed this review, join me on Sarah’s Great Reads (https://www.facebook.com/sarahsgreatreads) or book reviews, quotes, and audio extracts from the classics and modern literature.

Warmest regards,

Sarah M. Fredericks