Clark Elementary kids get book gifts
Morgan
Burton
|
Nine-year-old Morgan Burton and her 3rd grade
classmates are getting a special gift each month this school
year. The Clark Elementary students can thank customers at
the Left Bank Books store in the nearby Central West End.
A group of bookstore customers have agreed
to buy a book every month for a kid at Clark Elementary. The
program runs from last October through next May.
Each month, about 40 Clark students get a gift-wrapped
book. Each package is addressed to a specific student and
includes the sponsor's name. The kids then send thank you
notes.
The book-of-the-month for December was "Come
Look with Me," by author James Rolling. The book provides
explanations of different forms of African-American art. That
was the third month in a row for the gifts.
(Rachel Smith coordinates the Clark book
gift program for Left Bank Books. To learn more about the
store, visit www.left-bank.com.
If you have questions about the gift program, e-mail Rachel
at Rachel@left-bank.com.)
Morgan said the Left Bank books go into the
family's home library. "We have a lot of books at my home,"
she said.
But, she said she also borrows books from her
teacher's classroom library. Kids borrow those books for one
week at a time.
Fredricqua
Haynes
|
Fifth graders Fredricqua Haynes and Kenisha
Bense also have been recipients of the Left Bank books. Both
said they read a lot at home.
Eleven-year-old Fredricqua said, "If I don't
have any homework, I read before I go to bed. My mother says
I don't need to be laying around doing nothing."
Ten-year-old Kenisha said she gets a lot of
her books from the city library branch which is near her home.
Kenisha
Bense
|
Cynthia Warren is the principal at Clark Elementary
School. She said the Left Bank Books program helps the school
put "extra emphasis to reading at home." The Left Bank books
aren't given to the school; they are for each student to take
home as his or her own.
Clark school, like all Missouri elementary schools,
puts heavy emphasis on reading during the early grades. In
3rd grade, students are given a key state achievement test
to measure how well they are being taught, especially in reading,
language arts and math.
Principal Warren said the 3rd graders' MAP test
for reading put emphasis "on reading for understanding."
She said reading proficiency is a prime building
block for learning in all classes. "You need reading to be
able to understand all other subjects," she said.
Morgan Burton said reading is one of her favorite
subjects in school. She said her class has been studying about
"cause and effect" situations. They try to find a "cause and
effect" in a particular reading example.
"Then, we have to write a story with a cause
and effect," she said. One of her stories involved a turtle
and some fish, she said.
Morgan said she likes to read books in the Judith
B. Jones series. She said she likes them because they are
funny and everything comes out well at the end.
Fredriqua Haynes said she also likes "happy
stories where people get along with each other." She said
she has a "whole shelf of books at home." Fredricqua and Morgan
said they sometimes get books as gifts for birthdays and holidays.
But, Kenisha said she's on the lookout for books
when she's shopping with her mother. "If I see something I
like, my mom sometimes will buy it for me," she said.
Of course, reading is only one of the activities
for the kids.
Fredricqua said she likes to play basketball,
football and soccer. She said "tackle football" is her favorite.
She said she wants to be a teacher when she
grows up. "I want to teach young kids and help them learn,"
she said.
Morgan takes dancing and modeling lessons. She
has dancing lessons on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Then, she said
she takes modeling lessons at her church on Mondays, Wednesdays
and Fridays.
She wants to be a dancer and model when she
grows up "and also a first-grade teacher."
Kenisha also wants to be a dancer when she
grows up. She doesn't take dancing lessons but gets help from
a cousin who does. "When my cousin comes from her dancing
lessons, she and I practice what she learned in class," Kenisha
said.