UK Helps Lexington Children Jumpstart Reading Skills
Media Contacts:
Brad Duncan, (859) 257-4014
Katy Bennett, (859) 257-1754, x255
LEXINGTON, Ky. (Oct. 2, 2008) − In an effort
to assist children in gaining the language and literacy
skills they need when they enter kindergarten, the
University of Kentucky Jumpstart program is taking
part in the national
Jumpstart
Read for the Record Campaign today.
The 2008 Jumpstart Read for the Record campaign is
attempting to create the largest shared reading
experience when young and old alike read the beloved
children’s classic “Corduroy.” The previous record was
set during last year’s campaign on Sept. 20, 2007, when
258,000 people across the country read the same book.
Not only was the record set in 2007, more than $1
million was raised to finance the organization’s early
childhood work in low-income communities.
“We’re excited about this opportunity to demonstrate
that reading makes a difference in the lives of children
and to model the power and pleasure of reading,” said
Katherine McCormick, associate professor in the
College of
Education.
The Jumpstart
program recruits and trains adults to provide early
education programs to children in a setting where they
receive individual attention. Jumpstart Corps members
work with preschool children from low-income backgrounds
on language, literacy, social and initiative skills. Led
by co-principal investigators McCormick and Sharon
Stewart, associate dean for academic affairs in the
UK College of Health Sciences, UK Jumpstart partners
with the Head Start program and the
Fayette County Public
Schools Early Start program to make a difference in
the Lexington community.
UK’s Jumpstart Read for the Record effort includes a
number of events across Lexington, including UK Provost
Kumble R. Subbaswamy reading to the students at the UK
College of Education’s Early Childhood Lab this morning.
“The Provost’s participation in this campus and
community partnership is a perfect example of community
engagement and of the commitment of UK to the Lexington
community’s effort to improve educational outcomes for
young children in Lexington,” McCormick said.
Other events in Lexington include:
11 a.m. – Kentucky First Lady Jane Beshear will read to children at the Bracktown Child Care Center
1 p.m. – Fayette County School Superintendent Stu Silberman will read to a group of Early Start students at Edith J. Hayes Middle School