Thanks for your interest. Our Search for Solutions window has closed. Please find additional information about this particular Search for Solutions below. If you have questions, contact us at youthsuccess@garycommunity.org
Our Approach:
Third grade reading scores are a crucial predictive factor for graduation rates, success later in life, and the ability to be an engaged citizen in an increasingly complex world. Despite years of hard work by many, about 40% of kids living in the Denver Metro Area read on grade level by the end of third grade — that rate declines to about 20% for kids living in poverty.
Why does this continue to be a problem? We talked to dozens of students, families, policymakers, and researchers, and it turns out at least part of the problem is how we’ve defined the problem:
Families largely believe that the largest contribution they can make to their kid’s early literacy journey is by reading books aloud…
While reading aloud is both enjoyable and beneficial for kids and families, additional at-home literacy activities — such as songs and rhyming games — can be just as useful, if not more so, for young readers.
Provide families with better, more actionable information about their child’s reading skills?
Provide families with the right tools so they can serve as one of the primary participants in building their children’s reading skills?
Arm them with the right knowledge about the best, easiest practices proven to improve a child’s reading skills?
Struggling readers just don’t like to read…
Struggling students were often under-resourced. They overwhelmingly talked about how much they liked to learn and read; it’s just that they wanted to be able to take ownership of their reading — at their own pace and about subjects that interested them.
Put kids in the driver’s seat by giving them new ways to learn to read on their own and at their own pace?
Make reading activities even more delightful and meaningful?
Help kids understand their own reading level — and the next steps they can take to grow?
Learning to read only happens at school…
The foundations of literacy begin as early as when a child hears their family’s voices. As such, a whole village approach — one that extends before and beyond the classroom — has to be part of our approach to early literacy. Many educators agree, and are incredibly curious and thoughtful about how they might leverage their influence beyond the classroom.
Provide outside-of-school community members better, more actionable information about the reading skills of the kids they know and may even care for?
Encourage new and different community members to join in actively improving our kids’ reading skills?
Equip them with the tools and resources needed to improve our kids’ reading skills?
Finding a solution that increases third grade reading rates in the Denver Metro Area is vital to our mission, and there’s no way we succeed without recommended solutions from you. That’s why we’ve designed a new process aiming to source innovative, community-wide solutions that increase access to opportunity for all Colorado kids and families. We’re calling it a Search for Solutions (SFS)
You don’t need to be in Denver to submit a solution, and your solution doesn’t need to be fully baked. You don’t need to be in education, you don’t even need to have a job — we’re actively searching the nation for great ideas from families, nonprofits, teachers, businesses, advocates and even kids.
There are three ways we could work together to bring solutions to our communities:
Example: Your nonprofit in Commerce City is already supporting reading instruction for native Spanish-speaking students. At Gary, we help you with funding, but we also offer wrap-around curriculum design support from the nation’s leading experts on cultural relevance, connect you with parent organizing groups in the area, support you in piloting your newest ideas in a local school, and help you document your success for other funders.
Example: You’re a mom in Aurora who started playing rhyming games with your kids at bedtime and noticed huge growth in their reading skills. You know there’s something there, but you’re not sure where to take it. At Gary, we’ll help you distill what you’ve learned, write up a business plan, and resource you to launch a go-to-market strategy so even more parents have access to this fun, innovative solution.
Example: You’re a twenty-year-veteran Kindergarten teacher who goes to significant lengths to meet with the parents of your students at least six times a year. You’ve developed a parent-teacher conference tool that helps parents understand precisely how their child is doing and what to practice next. However, you end up doing these conferences on Saturdays and weeknights, and you’ve been told there’s no district or state funding to support other teachers in adopting your approach. At Gary, we’ll help you think about how to work with your school board or the state legislature to support meaningful collaboration that puts teachers and families on the same, well-resourced team.
We’ve done extensive research and participated in listening sessions with dozens of Metro Denver kids, families, schools and community leaders to define the problem behind our low third grade reading rates. These are the questions we believe we must answer in this SFS process:
But you can still reach out to our team if you have questions. Click here to contact us.
Below is our anticipated timeline for the next steps in our Third Grade Reading Proficiency Search for Solutions process:
Discover New Possibilities
Together, we will create the change our community wants to see. Whether you want to discover more about our ventures, or connect with a member of our team, we want to hear from you.