Last month, I along with a group from Better World Books and the National Center for Family Literacy visited the Santa Rosa School, located on the Tohono O’odham Indian Reservation. While there I cleaned graffiti, helped set up classrooms and did my best to act as a TA for a 1st grade class.
That experience in particular gave me a greater appreciation for the amazing work of teachers (their salaries should be quadrupled) as well as the importance of having quality educational resources such as books in classrooms (the children pored over the books and were anxious to have you read to them). Toward that end, Better World Books donated a few hundred books for students and parents to take home.
Another highlight was seeing the Family and Child Education Program (FACE) sponsored by the National Center for Family Literacy in action. The following excerpts by FACE participants explain better than I ever could the impact of this program on families. Your support of Better World Books and the NCFL makes stories like these possible. Please read their narratives below….
ENDING THE CYCLE
Rachel had a hard time at school, always getting teased about her mixed heritage. In eleventh grade, she dropped out. She doesn’t want the same for her three young grandchildren.
“FACE is showing me how to help my family. I’ve learned things on the computer and about reading and writing. This is what FACE has done for me: it has helped me out in dealing with myself and my family. I’d like to thank the adult education class for giving me encouraging words.”
WHAT MATTERS MOST
Colleen’s long shifts at the hospital took away time from her family. While she enjoyed the steady paycheck, Colleen felt that she was giving up spending time with her children. With the FACE program, she can spend time with them and will soon further her own education in nursing.
“My children are what matter most, especially their education. What better place to start their education than with the FACE program. FACE is helping me too. I am learning parenting skills through the Love and Logic program. I plan to continue coming to FACE because it’s been so helpful to both my children and me.”
COURAGE TO TRY AGAIN
Robert remembers a plaque he received at kindergarten graduation: “The higher you reach, the further you go.” His older siblings made fun of him, taunting he’d never go far. And Robert believed them. He dropped out of school and gave up every time he tried to go back.
But Robert got up the courage to complete his education and is now one credit away from receiving his GED. The plaque he remembers from kindergarten now stands for one thing: education.
“FACE has meant family, kindness and compassion. FACE has educated me in so many different ways and has enriched my life. I am so thankful for the program, which will be part of my life for a long time to come.”