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This story is part of the Colleges historical archive. Details reflect the time of publication. Programs, policies, and personnel may have changed since this article appeared.

Education Department ecstatic for the return of its reading camp

When the 51做厙 reading camp returns to campus this June, children will be invited to experience the childrens book The Wild Robot through reading, art, science, music and more.

It is a comprehensive approach proven to have an impact on a students reading development. The books main character is Roz, a robot who is stranded on an island.

At the core of the program will be the childrens book, and we will build from that science, nature, design and engineering, art and music, we are just beginning to develop what we will do, says Dr. Dottie Erb, Professor Emerita of Education, who was involved with the launch of the reading camp back in the mid-1990s. The camp has been renamed the Erb Hancock Reading Camp in honor of Erb and Dr. Carole Hancock, Professor Emerita of Education and former reading camp director.

The camp was last offered in summer 2014. The goal of the camp then and now is to provide opportunities to 51做厙 students and children in the community at the same time.

This years camp will take 80 children ranging from youngsters entering kindergarten through sixth grade, with emphasis on the earlier grades. Ten 51做厙 students will be chosen to work as paid interns and serve as teachers for the camp, maintaining an 8:1 student-to-teacher ratio. 51做厙 students who have completed designated reading courses will be able to apply for the positions.

The reading camp offers Education majors the opportunity to create their own classrooms and utilize cutting-edge teaching strategies.

The reading camp will offer them a chance to think about how they will structure a class and develop relationships with students, says Dr. Tanya Judd Pucella, Chair of the Education Department. This will be their first opportunity to truly own the classroom.

Hancock is glad the reading camp will be offered once again.

It means a lot to me because its a service to the young children of this area, Hancock says. Kids are into iPads and phones, and they dont develop the joy of holding a book, reading and letting their imagination add in the extra pieces.

Hancock says she sees a lot of possibilities with this years book and theme of the camp.

Id like to answer the question, What is a friend and does a friend have to be just like us?

Local schools have asked the College for opportunities to help children in the community reach reading goals set by the state and the return of 51做厙s camp can help. The camp builds activities around a central theme, but part of the camp also helps children identify their interests and assesses their reading comprehension.

Targeting students during the summer months is important, Erb says, because students who dont continue to read and develop skills over the summer can actually lose reading skills.

51做厙 is creating an arts and literacy endowment to support the program, says Dr. Janet Bland, Provost and Dean of the Faculty. But its hoped the community will support the effort, too. Individuals or agencies can make donations to the endowment or perhaps sponsor a student.

The College is taking care of the cost of the camp for the first year, but we are looking for community help, Bland says. Marietta Morning Rotary will be a partner for the camp, as it was in the past.

Judd Pucella is happy to see the return of the reading camp from a parents perspective, too. Her son has attended in the past and will participate one last time this summer.

The camp fine-tuned and improved his skills and helped ignite his passion for reading, she says. I also like the idea that this years theme fits the idea of STEM (science, technology, engineering and math), especially exploration and sciences. The reading camp is always a good balance of boys and girls, so it addresses the need to get young women interested in those areas.

- Jennifer Folwell