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A Special Report

YSL.com used as reading curriculum

The Young Saint Louis.com website is being used this spring to help a group of St. Louis area 8th graders "open up their literary horizons."

Kids from St. Louis and St. Louis County middle schools are participating--with their parents--in a special GEAR UP Literacy Academy. The sessions are being held on eight Saturday mornings during March and April.

Dr. Gwen Turner of the University of Missouri-St. Louis' College of Education is directing the academy sessions. She said the purpose of the academy is to impress on kids "the power of words.'"


Dahkesia Brownlee

One of the unique things about the Academy is that at least one parent has to accompany his or her 8th child and stay for the whole two-hour sessions. At some times, the adults have separate sessions and at other times the kids and the parents are together.

Fourteen-year-old Dahkesia Brownlee is an 8th grader at Normandy Middle School. She has been accompanied by both of her parents, Ricky and Cheryl Brownlee.


Cheryl and Ricky Brownlee

Mr. Brownlee said his wife signed Dahkesia up for the academy sessions. He said, "I brought her to the sessions and then decided to stick it out with her too." He said he was interested in one of the early lessons that focused on a new money game for kids.


Mike Goldman

In March, YSL.com described a new interactive game invented by the local financial firm, A.G. Edwards. "My Savings Quest" lets kids create online a personal budget. Then, the kids make monthly financial choices to stay within their income.

Dahkesia said, "It's necessary for kids to know about how to handle money."

Fourteen-year-old Mike Goldman of Florissant is an 8th grader at Kirby Middle School. His dad, Michael, said he volunteered to accompany his son "in order to enhance Mike's ability to read and understand."


Michael Goldman

He said he felt his son "needed to pick up the pace of his school work."

Mike admitted that, at first, he didn't want to come to the academy sessions. "But, now they are okay," he said.

Teresa Davis has her 14-year-old twins, Ciera and Shatera, at the academy. The twins are 8th graders at Normandy Middle School. They already have two older siblings in college. One is at St. Louis University and the other is at University of Missouri-Rolla.


Theresa Davis

Mrs. Davis said she wants to make sure the twins "have the skills they need for college."

Ciera said she likes the idea

YSL.com can be read like a newspaper. She likes the idea of having monthly book reviews. (The website has reviews of four kids books every month.)


Shatera and Ciera Davis

Shatera likes the idea of being able to read about other St. Louis area kids. "There's hands-on stuff about what the kids want to become," she said.

The GEAR UP Academy sessions include a variety of other activities that also add to broadening their "literary horizons."


What is GEAR UP?

The GEAR UP Literacy Academy is just one part of a comprehensive program seeking to help area students for college and beyond. The learn more visit www.stlgearup.org.

Once on the homepage, click on the Students icon on the left side of the page. That will tell (1) what GEAR UP can do for you, (2) about your school's GEAR Up liaison representative and (3) paying for college.

Another important part of GEAR UP is the Pathfinder program. That can help you in your career choices and planning, in creating resumes and in finding jobs.


One of the Saturday GEAR UP Academy activities involved using a personal camera to take pictures of their activities during a week. They then will arrange the pictures on a "story board" that explains their everyday life in pictures.

The "story boards" of all the kids will be put together in a documentary about themselves.

The academy kids come from 18 St. Louis city and eight suburban schools. At their first academy session, each kids is given a pre-test to measure their reading ability. They'll get a post-test at the end of the academy series.

In addition to the parents, each kid is linked with a UMSL education student who is their tutor during the Saturday sessions.


Zac Kenny

One of those college students is Zac Kenny. He's a 24-year-old senior who is studying to be an elementary school teacher. He is with Mike Goldman during the sessions.

Zac said he plans to teach 4th, 5th and 6th grade kids when he becomes a teacher.

"I want to work with kids after they get their educational foundation," he said. As a former engineering student, he feels he will be able to help the older elementary kids with their math and science studies.

Commenting on YSL.com, Zac said, "The website stories are more in tune with these kids because most are about other St. Louis area kids."

The parents are urged to get on the Internet with their kids at home during the week. YSL.com has an archive that includes over five years of past issues. That way, the kids can find a number of stories that fit into their personal interests.

The archive also has a Google search engine so kids can find stories by subject without knowing exactly which month a story appeared.

(The YSL.com website was used previously as a curriculum for a summer reading class in the Ferguson-Florissant School District. To read about those kids' reactions, go to Past Stories and click on July, 2001.)

 


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