Reading: Tutoring
An After-School
Reading Tutoring Program
Today's
Snack: Since
we're "unpeeling" the basics of an after-school tutoring program, why don't you
"unpeel" one or two delicious little clementines? These little citrus fruits
are chock full of vitamin C. They'd be good with a glass of orange juice to
really stoke your fuel tank.
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Today's Supplies:
Plastic storage tub |
mailing label | spiral notebook
One "easy" picture book
| one book keyed to the student's interest that may be fiction or nonfiction |
one textbook page or old test from the student's classroom
2 sharpened No. 2
pencils | 1 sharpened red pencil
Index cards | large
(2"-3") binder ring | stickers, stamps
Paperback or used
dictionary
3-ring binder of training
materials,
including the Ayres
spelling list of high-frequency words,
the 30 rules of
spelling,
and a list of After
School Treats writing activities from this website
Paper copy of the
Reading Report Form
(next item posted in
this website's tutoring series)
Here are some ideas for organizing a reading tutoring program for an
after-school program. It is anticipated that the tutors will work with the
students on standard lesson plans for a half-hour once or twice a week in the
late afternoons. Cost: approximately $25 per student per school year. You
should solicit mini-grants and sponsorships to cover costs so that there is no
cost for students and tutors - other than buying or making each other a
birthday card!
After-school program staff: duties include soliciting grants and
scholarships to fund the program; providing the students and the space; recruiting
volunteers; hosting the training (and providing a snack and beverage!); making
sure that tutors are informed if students are absent to save them an
unnecessary trip; liaisoning with parents and teachers in obtaining data about
students, inviting parents to tutoring sessions and pizza parties, and keeping
them informed of progress; storing tutoring tubs and in some cases, books and
other supplies; distributing end-of-semester reports to after-school
stakeholders, tutors, parents, teachers and the public.
Volunteer coordinator: this is the essential person that you will
need to run the program. Ideally, this person will work for free as a public service
and has literacy credentials. This person doesn't have to be a reading
specialist or a certified teacher, but it helps if this person has excellent
communication skills and believes strongly in helping students read better. The
coordinator will assemble the tutoring tubs and the training binder, plus
replenish tubs once a week, take calls from tutors who are calling in sick, assign
substitutes whenever possible; trouble-shoot tutoring problems, etc. Handling
25 to 30 tutor-student relationships is probably the most you can expect from a
volunteer; for greater numbers, you'll have to hire someone at least part-time.
This job should take 3-5 hours a week once the training has been given and the
tutoring tubs are assembled.
Reading specialist: it is crucial to have a professional reading
specialist consult on your tutoring program. Perhaps you can find someone who
will work for free, or for an honorarium for providing the training, below, as
well as ongoing support for the volunteer coordinator. The school librarian
nearest the after-school setting might be a possible candidate to help you in
the off-school hours.
Volunteer tutors: recruit them from corporations and
organizations that already support your after-school or its mission, find high
school or college students looking for service learning opportunities, or ask
for volunteers from area business, professional, civic and church groups,
retirement centers, the public library, bookstores . . . anywhere there are
adults who want to make a difference for a child. Your after-school
organization should screen volunteers for safety reasons and keep results on
file. Make it clear to volunteers that they will be expected to attend a
three-hour training session, plus one (or two) 30-minute tutoring sessions each
week your after-school is in session, and it is very important that they be on
time or a little early, and "call in sick" when necessary so that the students
they are matched with aren't disappointed.
Substitutes: it is adviseable to recruit and train one
substitute for every 10 volunteer tutors, and if they don't "sub" for anyone
during any given week, they can help the volunteer coordinator "pull books" and
replenish supplies, for example.
Training: Volunteers should be given a three-hour, hands-on training course,
with content determined by the volunteer coordinator in consultation with a
reading specialist. There should be demonstrations of typical tutoring
situations, information on what to expect, background on reading disabilities,
an explanation of the materials and how to use them, and an opportunity for one
or two run-throughs of the basic tutoring lesson plan.
Tutoring tubs: each student/tutor team will have a plastic
storage tub with their supplies for the tutoring session. The volunteer
coordinator will remove last week's books and put in new ones, as needed,
replenishing other supplies as they are used up. These tubs should be stored
near the space where the tutoring will take place. It is perfectly fine to take
them outside on nice afternoons.
Students: for safety reasons, students should go by their first names only, and
tutors should go by their last name and courtesy title (student=Maddy,
tutor=Mrs. Williams, Mr. Smith). Students will be advised not to give out their
address or any other information except their birthdays to the tutor, and vice
versa. The only task of a student is to bring some kind of classroom-related
reading material to each tutoring session, to go over it with the tutor, to
build the student's classroom confidence
Tutors: can tell the student what organization they are coming from, and why
they are doing this, and of course as the tutoring relationship continues, can
communicate as they feel comfortable. But they will be encouraged NOT to buy
the students gifts or give the student anything of value, except a birthday
card
Student-Tutor match: by taking a short interest survey, students
can be matched with tutors based on interests they have in common, so that
various genres and topics can help build the relationship and trust.
Parents: a note will be sent home before the tutoring session begins, to
explain the goal, introduce the tutor, and ask the parent to sign and send back
a permission slip so that the volunteer coordinator can contact the student's
teacher, as described below. Parents also will be mailed a progress report on
how the tutoring is going in mid-semester, and will be invited to a
semester-ending pizza party at which they can meet the tutor, hear their
student read aloud if desired, see the spelling deck and writing notebook, etc.
Teachers: with parental permission, a note will be sent to each student's
teacher, asking for results of the student's latest standardized reading test,
and the teacher's suggestions for reading and writing subskills that would
benefit the student to work on during tutoring. Teachers also will receive a
mid-semester progress report and will be invited to the semester-ending pizza
parties. They will be asked to forward the student's new standardize test
results to be compared to the results of similar students who were not in the
tutoring program, to help with evaluation.
Books: if there are not enough books in the associated school library, or in
the after-school program's own library, and borrowing can't be arranged through
the public library or an existing literacy organization, then the tutoring
program should run a community-wide book drive to obtain reading materials for
the program.
Evaluation: a semester report about the
tutoring program will be compiled by the volunteer coordinator, and distributed to after-school
program stakeholders, the tutors, parents, teachers, and the public, including
comparisons in standardized test scores before and after the tutoring sessions
on an aggregate basis for the students who participated vs. students similarly
situated who did not participate.