Tuesday, June 10, 2014

San Diego Co Library - Tutors Make a Difference! LEARN Literacy

LEARN Adult Literacy - San Diego County Library

Change a life. Change a community.
Libraries Empower All to Read Now!

Our mission is to help adults improve reading and writing skills to achieve their full potential as community members, family members, workers, and life-long learners; to teach non-English speakers ESL (English as a Second Language) skills; to tailor services to individual needs, with confidentiality; to foster understanding and use of public libraries; to educate communities on the importance of literacy.  See Pictures Here !

San Diego County Library
201 E. Douglas Ave
El Cajon, CA 92020
619.588.3740

Sunday, June 8, 2014

ACTION ALERT: Letters to the Governor Needed to Protect $5 Million Library Funding

Action Alert
Letters to the Governor
Needed to Protect $5 Million Library Funding in Budget
CLA News From the Capitol:
6.06.2014 by Mike Dillon & Christina DiCaro  [ Full Text ]

The legislature has until Sunday, June 15th, the constitutional deadline, to send the Governor the Budget bill.

The Governor has until July 1 to sign the 2014-15 Budget into law.
He also has the authority to “blue pencil” (reduce or eliminate) certain provisions of the Budget.

Please take a minute today to write a letter to Governor Brown, encouraging him to support and leave intact the $5 million for Budget items:
6120-211-0001 - $4 million for the California Library Services Act
6120-213-0001 - $1 million for the California Library Literacy program

In your letters please stress how your libraries are busier than ever, but the devastating cuts of the past hinder your ability to provide certain services.  With the economy making a modest recovery, now is the time to invest in communities by returning critical financial state resources to the public libraries.

Address your letters to:
The Honorable Edmund G. Brown, Jr.
Governor, State of California
State Capitol, First Floor
Sacramento, CA.  95814

You may also fax your letters to the Governor’s office:  (916) 558-3160
Thank you for your help.  READ Full Text

Saturday, June 7, 2014

San Diego Public Library :: READ/San Diego’s 24th Annual Tutor Conference: June 14, 2014

24th Annual Tutor Conference
June 14, 2014
8 am – 4:30 pm
Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace & Justice
University of San Diego
KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Mindy L. Kornhaber

June 9: Early Registration rate of $35 ends June 9, 2014
After June 9, the registration fee is $45.

Join literacy tutors, teachers and literacy professionals from across California for a day of informative and enjoyable hands-on workshops. Twenty-eight workshops are scheduled in four strands, with breaks midway through the strands. A catered luncheon will be served between the strands and will feature Keynote Speaker Mindy Kornhaber.

Accent Reduction Techniques-Tips for Adult Learners: Margaret Watkins
Assisting Struggling Readers & Writers (p 1&2): Kathy St. John
Banish Boredom! Engage-em Activities: Tamarie Tigh
Comparative Approaches to Teaching Phonics (p 1&2): Elena Mendoza
Critical Thinking Strategies for Your ESL Students: Karyn Crowe-Ruiz
Effective Lesson Planning: Sue Pon
Evidence Based Reading Strategies Improve Comprehension (p 1&s): Guillermo Verdin
Reasoning & Rigor from the Beginning (p 1&2): Jayme Adelson-Goldstein
Tap That App: Susan Vega
The New Ged 2014 (p 1&2): Tom Brewer

For more information, call (619) 238-6603 or check out the Brochure.

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Literacy Jobs: California

Literacy Jobs: California

focus on increasing literacy skills among low-income youth, primarily elementary students in public schools.
DEADLINE: August 20

Reading Partners, Redwood City
Site Coordinators are placed in partner schools where they oversee the full-time operations of a Reading Partners reading center. This includes student assessments, tutoring, and coordination of an average of 35-80 volunteer tutors
TERM: Aug 14–Jun 15

Budget Conference Committee Approves $5 Million For Public Libraries In Budget

Budget Conference Committee Approves $5 Million For Public Libraries In Budget
CLA-News From the Capitol: 6.04.2014 by Mike Dillon & Christina DiCaro

     ═════════►
This afternoon, on a unanimous vote of the members, the Budget Conference Committee approved $5 million in new funding for public libraries, followed by a series of positive comments about the great work and positive community benefit of public libraries.

~ this funding request was developed by Assemblyman Mike Gatto (D-Los Angeles) and supported by a bi-partisan group of 13 of his legislative colleagues, to try to restore some of the major cuts that the public libraries have endured for the last few years.

~ the A Budget Subcomm on Educ-Fin had approved $10 million for public library restoration ($8 million for the California Library Services Act and $2 million for the State adult literacy program)

~ this funding would be in addition to the $1.8 baseline currently for CLSA and the $2.8 million for literacy

~ the S Budget Subcomm-Educ Fin did not approve additional money for CLSA

~ this forced the item into the Budget Conference Committee

     ═════════►
~ the item passed on a unanimous, bi-partisan vote
~ the issue still has a long way
~ discussions with Dept of Finance to prevent Governor from eliminating it
~ there was no discussion of the specific allocation of the $5 million in Comm
~ believe they will allocate $4 million for CLSA; $1 million for the literacy

Please Thank the legislators who assisted CLA in this effort:

Budget Conference Committee Members
Assemblywoman Nancy Skinner, Chair
Assemblyman Richard Bloom
Assemblyman Jeff Gorell
Assemblywoman Shirley Weber
Senator Mark Leno, Vice Chair
Senator Loni Hancock
Senator Ricardo Lara
Senator Jim Nielsen
And Senate President pro Tempore, Darrell Steinberg

Legislators Who Signed the Budget Request Letter
Assemblyman Mike Gatto (author of the letter)
Assemblyman Luis Alejo
Assemblyman Bill Quirk
Assemblyman Frank Bigelow
Assemblyman Ken Cooley
Assemblywoman Susan Bonilla
Assemblyman Kevin Mullin
Assemblyman Brian Jones
Assemblyman Adrin Nazarian
Assemblyman Brian Maienschein
Assemblyman Chris Holden
Assemblywoman Joan Buchanan
Assemblywoman Sharon Quirk-Silva
Assemblywoman Kristin Olsen
Assemblywoman Marie Waldron

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Newport Beach Library - "Gift of Literacy" Luncheon

Seventh Annual Gift of Literacy
"Gift of Literacy" Luncheon
June 6, 2014


Featured guest speaker
Best-selling author
Lisa See
SOLD OUT!

This year, the Newport/Mesa ProLiteracy annual fundraising luncheon will feature bestselling author Lisa See. Her books, Snowflower and the Secret Fan, Peony in Love, Shanghai Girls and others, have captured the imagination of readers everywhere.

Lisa See will be debuting her newly released book, China Dolls, at this event. Each attendee will receive a first edition hardback copy of the book with their ticket purchase. This special gift is made possible by our sponsor Richard Hearn of the STARCARE Foundation.

The Literacy Program is very excited to have this acclaimed writer as guest speaker and hopes you will join the special event. There will be a silent auction, opportunity drawings, and Ms. See will be signing copies of her book.

For more information contact: (949) 717-3874 or literacy@newportbeachca.gov.

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Lunch @ The Library - California Library Association

Lunch @ the Library: Program Information


The California Summer Meal Coalition (CSMC) and California Library Association (CLA) are working with libraries and meal providers across California to offer summer lunch programs that are designed to provide nourishment and summer enrichment for children and teens. All library meal sites provide free summer lunches and engage families with library programs and services. Some libraries are extending the impact of their lunch programs by providing arts, literacy, and STEM programming for participating children and teens.

Library summer meal sites in California
The need for free summer meals
Summer vacation presents a different reality for many impoverished children in California. In addition to limited access to summer learning and enrichment programs, many low-income children struggle to have basic needs met, with reduced access to healthy food and safe places to congregate. The intersections between summer health and summer learning and enrichment are great, suggesting that a holistic view of the summer landscape is crucial to understanding existing challenges and opportunities to creating a summer experience in which all children are healthy, active, and engaged.

A 2012 report from the National Summer Learning Association highlights the links between food insecurity, childhood obesity, and the achievement gap:4
•Food insecurity increases during the summer break without access to the nutrition provided by the National School Lunch Program.
•Children may gain weight two to three times faster during the summer than during the school year.
•Low-income youth may fall further behind in academic skills—particularly reading—during the summer break, experiencing greater “summer learning loss” than their higher-income peers and widening the achievement gap.
•Nutrition education interventions that exclusively target the school environment may be less impactful because weight gain happens primarily outside of school.
•Adequate nutrition promotes brain development and improves cognitive functioning, whereas inadequate nutrition is associated with physical and mental health issues, emotional and behavioral problems, learning deficiencies, lower grades, and repeating a grade.

Children who are well-nourished are likely to have cognitive advantages over children with deficits in this area, and reducing health disparities among lower and higher socioeconomic children can help close the achievement gap.5
READ MORE !

Visit the California Department of Education’s searchable online map here for more sites. Summer meal sites will offer free lunch and snacks to youth under age 18 from June 2 through August 8.