Wednesday, August 7, 2019

Two Black Authors Declare War Against Illiteracy

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TWO BLACK AUTHORS DECLARE WAR AGAINST ILLITERACY WITH NEW EDUCATIONAL MODEL


Dallas, TX -- Reading is a fundamental element of learning, but not everybody has that skill. Two authors with experience in education want to change that and have released a new book to help make that happen. The book was inspired by personal experience.

A heartfelt letter kicks off Why Sammy Still Can't Read: A Service Delivery Model for Creating a Culture of Reading. The letter is written by author Leroy McClure to his brother, Sam, who eventually discovered he had dyslexia and it serves as both an apology and a promise.

"Because I now know about different learning styles and learning disabilities, I promise I'll help students like you receive the proper diagnosis early and create a successful academic intervention plan to help ensure that they'll learn to read, write, compute math, and be better prepared to enter college or the workforce," he writes.

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McClure's brother is far from alone in his struggles with reading and learning. The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development estimates that learning disabilities affect 15 to 20 percent of people in the United States. Those who can't read often face extreme challenges coping with the standardized testing in school and may struggle with graduating from high school, college or succeeding at work.

This book by Leroy and Yvette McClure - who have decades of experience in education - aims to inform others about people who learn differently and provide a service delivery model for reading to help students succeed at all levels, especially those with learning disabilities. Administrators and teachers will find practical steps to help struggling students either at their school as a whole or in small groups, leading to a culture of reading. That culture can transform students.

The authors detail learning disabilities and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactive Disorder, which crosses all races and economic backgrounds; offers resources to service providers; aims to raise money to provide 1,000 teachers with specialized training to become certified academic language therapists or licensed dyslexic therapists or practitioners; and write a service delivery model action plan that includes a buy-in from teachers, administrators, parents and governing boards, and appropriate training for teachers and staff.

If 2 out of 3 African American males in prison can't read and they went to school every day during Kindergarten through second grade, this in itself is a national crisis! They didn't just drop out of school, with all the peer pressure they were forced out because they couldn't read. The first 3 years of school you learn to read then you read to learn. Our African American boys are forced to learn from the streets when they can't read. To set our people free, we must control the narrative. Why Sammy Still Can't Read also a national movement as we hold people accountable and offer solutions.

McClure urges sweeping changes in education from parents, educators and politicians, starting with the basic building block of reading. "We as Americans citizens must look at illiteracy as a crisis," he writes. "This is about all children exercising one of their civil rights to read so that no child will be left behind."


BOOK DETAILS:
Why Sammy Still Can't Read: A Service Delivery Model for Creating a Culture of Reading
Leroy McClure and Yvette McClure
Dog Ear Publishing
ISBN: 978-1-4575-6683-7
170 pages

For additional information, please visit www.WhySammyStillCantRead.com

Available at Ingram, Amazon.com, Barnes & Nobles, and fine bookstores everywhere

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Posted by community events coordinator, Nzinga Lonstein Austin, is a prolific blogger who writes on the entertainment industry and issues for people with developmental and physical challenges.

She is presently in high school looking to have a career in video, film, and media. You can see more of her entertainment writing on Lonstein Movies.


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