
UNF student Tiara Hughes
Working with four or five students in a group, tutors made informal assessments and developed individualized activities based on standards in the areas of sight words, concepts of print, phonemic awareness/alphabet knowledge, comprehension, fluency, and writing. Parents were pleased with their students’ progress and saw tangible results. One parent said her child began writing original stories and poems. Others saw improvement in their students’ handwriting and vocabulary.
UNF student Russell Connell
A public library tutoring partnership is a first for UNF. While the undergraduates in the Methods and Resources for Literacy Development course found real-life application for their teaching concepts, Dr. Hall said elementary students gained knowledge in the number of sight words learned, concepts of print, alphabet knowledge, letter/sound knowledge, writing ability, and comprehension as measured through graphic organizers. Overall, the pilot program was deemed a huge success, and the Jacksonville Public Library and UNF are already planning their next tutoring program.Olga Bayer is the Community Relations Specialist at Jacksonville (FL) Public Library.
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