After School Academy

The After School Academy (ASA) has three overall objectives:
-
Academic – to improve reading skills and homework performance
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Wellness training and recreation – to improve fitness
and nutrition
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Increase parent involvement with reading, school
activities
For the past two years, 120 students in
second, third, and fourth grades enrolled in the Academy, which met four days a
week for three hours after school.
Partners are
West
Middle
Elementary School, Asylum Hill
Learning Zone, Capital Region Education Council (CREC), Boys and
Girls Club. The
Connecticut State Department of Education allocated funding for two
years and additional funds were secured from private sources.
Program
evaluation includes tracking data such as reading
performance (test scores), attendance, behavior, fitness, and
parent involvement measures.
Process
Each student is in a class with a maximum of
ten students at the same grade level, but at different reading
levels. A Group Leader
(GL) has been trained to lead the group, using materials
specifically designed for after school programs.
Certified teachers train and mentor GLs, and a reading
specialist is the Education Coordinator.
An overall Academy Director supervises the entire program.
Since students meet in school classrooms, a close
relationship with teachers is a significant benefit.
GLs and teachers talk almost every day about students in the
Academy.
We chose a curriculum recommended by the
Children’s Aid Society in New York City
called KidzLit, which is used by other
Connecticut
students including middle school students in five Hartford schools.
The set of 160 books includes leader guides so GLs have a
well defined process for leading their class.
We provide a variety of additional books for group, buddy,
and individual reading.
A primary goal is to make reading more fun so that students will enjoy
reading on their own. Therefore students may chose books that are of
interest to them.
KidzLit emphasizes literacy plus
character building.
Materials and teaching focus on increasing enjoyment of
reading, growing vocabulary, understanding what is read, and a
greater ability to express ideas.
Discussion and group activities include students building
stronger relationships with other students and adults, developing a
better understanding of themselves and others, and making a stronger
commitment to shared values and good character traits.
The typical day consists of the following:
Pick up students in their classroom
Provide a nutritious snack in the cafeteria
Read Aloud time using KidzLit
materials for about an hour
Homework and additional focus on more reading
Recreation and fitness at either West
Middle gym or Boys & Girls Club
Getting students home safely
We
vary the sequence by doing homework first and group reading second
in some classrooms so that teachers and volunteers may visit several
classrooms to assist more students their homework.
Students have homework almost every day consisting of reading
and math.
We
also take students on field trips outside or inside the school.
“Inside” field trips occur because time is limited so a
number of professional resources are invited to come into the
school to expand students’ horizons.
Reading
Block
GLs take students back upstairs from the
cafeteria to their classroom so the reading block can start shortly
after 3 PM. We start
with a book to be read aloud.
Reading Aloud is our preferred form of reading,
and occurs three to four times each week.
GLs know their story and have studied the KidzLit guide in
advance. Structure is
important for the students to be comfortable and pay attention.
Children become distracted easily if a GL is not well
organized, and their behavior can disrupt the class.
Here is the sequence of activities for Reading
Aloud.
Introduce – the book with a personal story or
other opening
Read
– usually the GL’s job, or students may chose to read as well
Discuss
– ask open-ended questions to stimulate discussion
Connect – with an activity or two to
reemphasize the story
Wrap up – students summarize what has been
learned
Homework
All students have daily reading homework for at least 20 minutes and most will have math every day as
well. We have reading
materials (in boxes graded by reading level) for those students who
need them. Students are
usually distributed around the classroom so that they can work
independently or in pairs.
Teachers circulate between classrooms to assist students, but
the primary responsibility for assisting students lies with the GLs.
GLs move around the room to give each student individual
time.
Recreation and Wellness
Second and some third/fourth grade students
stay in the West Middle gym for activities rather than go to the
Boys and Girls Club.
Activities include some fitness exercises, running races, playing
kick ball, dodge ball, volleyball, jumping rope, and a variety of
other active games.
Weather permitting students also go outside.
Some third and fourth graders are taken to the
Boys and Girls Club (BGC).
Several adults
accompany students to make certain that all students cross
the busy Asylum Avenue
safely. We have special
high visibility vests to aid in this process.
Activities at the BGC vary by day.
The schedule includes fitness and nutrition training,
recreation in the gym, and “free time” when ASA students may
participate in any available activities.
BGC also provides dinner to students every evening.
Going Home
Most of the students in the ASA live close to
West Middle. Almost all
children are picked up by parents or other family members either at
the school or at the Boys and Girls Club two blocks away.
Some pickups are late and we must make phone calls to parents
to remind them. If
delayed pickup happens too frequently, our policy is to dismiss a student
from the program.
Results
Initial results are encouraging.
The Developmental Reading Assessment (DRA)
was given to second and third grade students three times this past
school year – October 2007, January 2008, and end of May 2008.
Preliminary results show a higher percentage of ASA students
(62% of second graders and 56% of third graders) are reading on
grade level than students not participating in the ASP (about 45%).
Teachers have been very supportive and quite
positive. An informal
survey produced these responses.
There are several children who are now
doing homework that were not before.
I think [ASA] is helping V and S. I am also glad …
there is independent reading happening ….
He is reading more fluently and S is now on grade level. N is
doing well. M struggles with reading but the practice is good.
It is helping some children. There are eight of my students in
the ASA and I can see improvement with some.
… students are actually doing homework now and passing it in
I also like that they have focused reading time…..
I love the pre-story activities, predictions and the vocabulary
building. I love the follow through extension activities after
the story is read. I love the fact that there are rotating
teachers and staff that come in to help with homework. I love
that there is a snack first for the children. It's all very
good. Even though there is a mixture of kids in the classroom,
some very dependent and some independent, there is assistance for
them all.
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