Thursday, July 31, 2008

"Bell students polish reading skills at summer camp"

In the Middlesboro, KY Daily News, the below article featured the students from Bell County, Kentucky who attended the Reading Camp held at the Pine Mountain Settlement School. In addition to Bell County, students from Harlan County were also recruited for the Pine Mountain camp. Click on the picture below to view a life-size version of the article.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

"Happy campers say reading rocks"

Yet another story about the first overseas sharing of Reading Camp has appeared in the local Grahamstown, South Africa newspaper, the Grocott's Mail. The article is not available online, but two picture scans are available below. Click on the pictures to view life-size versions of the article to read for your self. The article features pictures from Connor Egan and Drew Eclov, two of the volunteers sent from Kentucky to join the Reading Camp team in South Africa.



Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Beyond expectations


I wanted to add my two-cents’ worth to what I am sure has been a feedback about the Reading Camp last week. All I can say is that it was truly awesome and way beyond the expectations of any of us. The young folks from Lexington and the youth from Grahamstown worked together like old friends. The kids loved every minute of it, and all of us were weeping on Saturday when we put them in the combis to go home. The creativity of the teachers, the foods, the spontaneity of the counselors and helpers was like nothing I’ve ever experienced before. You will be able to see the energy when they return home with the photos. [More photos will be put on the blog soon!]

Thank you again for all your hard work to help us make the camp possible. We’ve got a winner, as they say, and already plans and tentative bookings have been made for next year!

-Brother Timothy Jolley, OHC is the prior of the Mariya uMama weThemba Monastery in Grahamstown, South Africa that teamed with volunteers from the Dioceses of Grahamstown and Lexington for the first overseas Reading Camp this summer

Monday, July 28, 2008

A promise fulfilled

Our first Reading Camp in Northern Kentucky has ended. The children have returned to their homes, the reading center looks like a choir room again devoid of its colorful decorations, and the materials have been packed up and put back on the trailer, or directly in Mary Eclov’s car to be returned to Lexington. Years ago, I promised a dear friend who’d attended Reading Camp with me at the Cathedral Domain that we’d find a way to do this in Northern Kentucky. He’s now gone, but the promise remained to finally be fulfilled. While I slept better last night then I have in weeks, I awakened missing the children. Thoughts like “if we were still at camp the kids would be doing their journals” or “I’d be finishing my second rotation about now” keep running through my mind. That’s how I know that I miss the kids, the activity, the excitement of Reading Camp.

What a week we had! The campers bounced in each day with big smiles, ready for whatever challenges were put before them. They worked happily in centers, trying everything the teachers offered with great enthusiasm. Needless to say, the teachers (who are my personal heroes because they were incredible) responded with carefully planned advances to increasingly more difficult work. The reading center atmosphere was charged with a sense of empowerment. Because of the support and care shown each camper, they wanted to take risks and do more. WOW! It was evident that they were basking in their new-found confidence every time a station rotation was called because they collectively groaned that they had to leave the work they were doing and move on. They’d get to the next station, become involved with the work there, and groan all over again when asked to rotate. What a testament to the perseverance of these kids, and the kind of teaching happening in the reading centers. We promised we’d help these kids grow as readers, and they took full advantage!

I pray that the promise we made with our first year’s group of campers is fulfilled when they return to school. Thanks to the generous donations of many in our local church community, each camper left with a Reading Camp bag filled with at least a dozen or more books. They’ve reported to us that they have been reading at home at night during camp. Will they continue to do this now that camp is over with the new books they’ve been given? Will they maintain that heady confidence we saw in them as they left yesterday with hugs, thanks and their bags full of new books? Almost every camper, and some of their parents, asked if we could continue to have Reading Camp a second week! I did make another promise. I promised that we’d have Reading Camp again next year in Northern Kentucky. It was such a great week with wonderful campers, teachers, counselors, volunteers and committee members making it all happen. I’m so thankful for each and every one of them. I hope they’ll help me fulfill the promise of a Reading Camp return to Northern Kentucky in the summer of 2009. Reading really does rock!

- Ringmaster Lucie Collier is a volunteer camp director from St. Andrew's, Ft. Thomas with the Northern Kentucky Reading Camp