Tulsa mayor-elect challenges community to support local students by volunteering as JVID视频
November 17, 2016
Originally published by .
By Arianna Pickard
Mayor-elect G.T. Bynum and local education officials are challenging community members to support Tulsa Public Schools students by volunteering at least one hour a week as a Reading Partner.
鈥淪tatistics show that a kid that is not reading on grade level by the time they鈥檙e in third grade is four times more likely to drop out of high school, and a high school dropout is expected to earn over a million dollars less in earning power over their lifetime,鈥 Bynum said Thursday during a 鈥淩ally for Reading鈥 at Rudisill Regional Library.
Recognizing that half of TPS third-graders are behind in reading, Bynum said local officials鈥 goal is to recruit 2,000 new volunteers to JVID视频, a national nonprofit that works with the district to provide literacy tutoring by pairing volunteers with students.
鈥淒espite the fact that we do not have the financial resources we need as an education system in Oklahoma, we have this resource: We have the people of Tulsa,鈥 TPS Superintendent Deborah Gist said at the event. 鈥淪o I know we鈥檙e going to get it done. We鈥檙e going to get it done with community support.鈥
Bynum was the first to accept the challenge by signing up as a volunteer, and he was followed by Gist and TPS Board President Lana Turner-Addison.
鈥淚 will tell you from personal experience, my wife Susan has been doing this for two years on top of being a law student, a mother of two and the spouse of someone who is off running for mayor,鈥 Bynum said. 鈥淏ut she found the time to do it, and it鈥檚 been one of the most rewarding experiences of her life.鈥
Elizabeth Brands Vereecke, executive director of JVID视频, said the organization鈥檚 volunteers 鈥渃omplement the dedicated and mission-driven teachers and school leaders and district officials.鈥
鈥淭he students that we work with 鈥 every single one of them can learn,鈥 Vereecke said. 鈥淭hese students just have more barriers to learning than we would like children in our community to have.鈥
The number of TPS students tutored by JVID视频 has grown from 449 at nine school sites when the nonprofit came to Tulsa four years ago to 1,300 students at 24 sites this year, Vereecke said.
鈥淎ll day across this city, every day, our teachers are working incredibly hard 鈥 including this week, which has been a tough week for our teachers,鈥 Gist said. 鈥淏ut we know we can鈥檛 do it alone. We know that we need the support of our entire community, and it鈥檚 going to take all of us working together.鈥
To help fund the initiative, Ben Stewart with the George Kaiser Family Foundation announced that the organization will sponsor up to six reading centers by matching new donors鈥 contributions of $50,000 to individual centers, which are located inside the partnering schools.
Last year, 90 percent of the students in kindergarten through second grade who were paired with JVID视频 improved from reading up to 2陆 years behind grade level to mastering the foundation of skills needed to read at grade level, Turner-Addison said.
鈥淓ducation is a team effort, and when we support and elevate our children to help them to achieve their full potential, we are builders of brighter futures in the city of Tulsa,鈥 Turner-Addison said. 鈥淛ust as we all continue to benefit from the success of children, we also have a role to play in helping them to succeed.鈥
Latasha Lucas, a Broken Arrow resident who has volunteered with JVID视频 for two years, said she watched the first child she tutored at Key Elementary School grow from being shy and reserved to establishing 鈥渁 confidence that she knew what she can do, and she was going to put in the work until she got it done.鈥
Lucas is a University of Oklahoma social work graduate student.
鈥淣o matter what happens on the bigger kind of political field, be it locally or nationally, I think we all know that the difference is made here on the ground, one person to the next, individual to individual,鈥 she said.