Summer Reading Program at WTBBL
Every year the Washington Talking Book & Braille Library joins with many other libraries across the country in offering a Summer Reading Program using a common theme – this year’s was “Be Creative @ Your Library”. Seventy of the Library’s elementary and teen patrons all across Washington State participated this year, using a game-board-like pathway to keep track of the minutes they spent reading. Tactile dots are added to enable any severely visually impaired child to mark them independently.
Each week of the program, participants receive a packet in the mail containing jokes, booklists, activity ideas, and occasionally a small incentive such as a bookmark. WTBBL’s Braille Department rises to the growing challenge of transcribing all those documents for young patrons who read braille. At the end of the program each participant receives a certificate and a package of small prizes. The bulk of them are sent by mail, but a number of participants are able to pick them up in person at our Celebration event in Seattle. This year’s Celebration was on Saturday, August 29th and included a performance by Vashon Island storyteller, Merna Hecht.
Almost all of WTBBL’s 70 Summer Readers reached the 8-week goal of at least 1,000 minutes, and quite a few read many times that amount! This is quite an accomplishment for our young patrons, all of whom have some kind of special need, whether it’s a learning disability, a visual impairment that requires large print, or the need to master braille in their path toward literacy. Here are some things parents say about the program:
“My daughter is so excited that she and her best friend are reading the same books this summer! Her friend gets them in print from our local library, and she borrows hers in braille from WTBBL!” — C.C., mother of 12-year-old patron.
“The program was so motivating for our son. It’s the first year he’s read all his books himself and he loved your jokes! — J.E., mother of 12-year-old patron.
“Thanks for the large print jokes! Our son doesn’t normally read for pleasure yet – but he will pick up those joke sheets and read them!” — D.C., mother of 7-year-old patron.