Celebrating the written word
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Danette Goulet
WESTSIDE -- Three schools this week are celebrating the arrival of
more than 9,000 books, 3,000 at each campus.
And they didn’t spend a dime on any of them.
It is simply unheard of and simply wonderful, said Julie McCormick,
principal of Pomona Elementary School.
“It supplements three programs, which is money we don’t have to spend
on books,” she said.
The books came from three local Rotary clubs, which issued a challenge
to the Newport-Mesa community in the fall.
Rotarians asked the public to make donations to match the $7,600
pledged by the Rotary clubs of Newport-Balboa, Newport-Irvine and Newport
Sunrise to buy thousands of books for Pomona, Wilson and Whittier
elementary schools.
Although community pledges fell short, the response of $7,200 was
enough to buy a lot of books, Rotarian Roger McGonegal said.
Students at the three Westside schools showed their appreciation to
Rotarians and donors this week in three celebrations.
At a party at Pomona, Pam Oravetz’ third-grade class sang and danced
for a small audience Wednesday.
The schools’ literacy leader and volunteer coordinator, Jill
McWhertor, explained how the books had been put to use in the accelerated
reader program, to fill the library of the new after-school learning
center, and to supplement science and social study programs.
“The kids just love the books and thank you for all your support,” she
told them.
The books were ordered through The Los Angeles Times’ Reading By 9
program, which allows Rotarians to use the program’s purchasing power to
get as much as a 50% discount on books, McGonegal added.
Rotarians chose the three Westside schools with the hope that
additional reading material would help raise test scores, said Jim de
Boom, a Rotarian and Daily Pilot columnist.
Each of the schools have a large number of students who speak little
or no English. That has contributed to the area’s lower test scores,
school officials said. And after the passage of Proposition 227, which
halted most dual-language education, the schools lost a large number of
Spanish books in their libraries, McGonegal said.
But even with 1,600 new books in classrooms last year, and 9,100 more
this year, the job is still far from done, he said.
“What are needed now are mentors,” he said.
The service clubs and the schools also will continue to seek donations
and volunteers, he said.
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