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Florida’s struggling readers flock to free book program

A $200 million effort approved in 2021 by the Florida Legislature already has shipped nearly 336,000 free books to elementary school students in the state, making good on a promise to deliver a new book every month to children who need to boost reading skills.

Editor’s note: Families can check eligibility requirements here the New Worlds Reading Initiative and enroll their children here. To read more about what Florida legislator Chris Spowls has to say about the program, click here.

The state’s New Worlds Reading Initiative, signed into law last June, is the first statewide book delivery service for Florida’s struggling early readers. Students who are reading below grade level at both traditional district schools and district charter schools are eligible.

Families can choose books at their child’s grade level from several genres including humor, adventure, art history and science. Books are available in English, Spanish, Haitian Creole, Braille and large print. Each month’s delivery includes support materials for parents.

The program was proposed by Florida House Speaker Chris Sprowls, R-Palm Harbor, as a way to encourage students to read at home and to help build home libraries for families who cannot afford to buy books. Outlined in HB 3, it aligned with Sprowls’ legislative agenda, which included HB 7045, the largest expansion of a school choice program in the nation.

More than 100,000 students have enrolled in the program so far, but state officials say more than 500,000 may be eligible. That estimate is based on 2021 reading scores on the state’s standardized test, where 45% of third graders scored below grade level in reading.

To help meet the demand, the Lastinger Center for Learning at the University of Florida, a national education innovation hub whose stated mission is to create educational systems where every child and educator experiences high quality learning regardless of life circumstances, is administering the New Worlds Reading Initiative.

Duggins and her team spent months preparing for the program launch, conducting interviews and focus groups across the state with stakeholder groups including families, literacy leaders and district and community advocates. Included in input from participants at the well-attended sessions were suggestions for book titles, including “I Am Enough,” “Charlotte’s Web,” and “Hidden Figures,” based on the Florida Department of Education booklist embedded within the B.E.S.T. Standards.

Scholastic Corporation, the world’s largest publisher and distributor of children’s books and print and digital materials, was tapped to distribute the books. The company sent the first book shipments in December from a warehouse in Missouri. Books now are being packaged and shipped from a new Scholastic warehouse in Sanford that was created to manage the New Worlds initiative.

About the UF Lastinger Center for Learning:

Housed within the University of Florida College of Education, the Lastinger Center for Learning is an education innovation hub that develops solutions designed to improve outcomes across three education milestones: kindergarten readiness, reading proficiency by third grade, and algebra proficiency by ninth grade. The Lastinger Center’s innovations serve children and educators in every community in Florida and have expanded both nationally and globally. The remarkable scope of the Lastinger Center’s work and the impact of its collective efforts have drawn state, national, and international recognition and investment. Learn more at lastinger.center.ufl.edu.

About Scholastic:

For more than 100 years, Scholastic Corporation (NASDAQ: SCHL) has been encouraging the personal and intellectual growth of all children, beginning with literacy. Having earned a reputation as a trusted partner to educators and families, Scholastic is the world’s largest publisher and distributor of children’s books, a leading provider of literacy curriculum, professional services, and classroom magazines, and a producer of educational and entertaining children’s media. The Company creates and distributes bestselling books and e-books, print and technology-based learning programs for pre-K to grade 12, and other products and services that support children’s learning and literacy, both in school and at home. With 15 international operations and exports to 165 countries, Scholastic makes quality, affordable books available to all children around the world through school-based book clubs and book fairs, classroom libraries, school and public libraries, retail, and online. Learn more at www.scholastic.com.

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