The Fayette Citizen-Weekend Page
Wednesday, October 28, 1998
Burch reading program proves
popular with parents and kids

By PAT NEWMAN
Staff Writer

It's 7:15 p.m. and the halls of Robert J. Burch Elementary School are quiet. The custodian is busy sweeping the floor of the cafeteria and the hum of a vacuum can be heard in one of the empty classes. But walk into the media center and it's like you've stumbled into a well-organized surprise party. Parents and their children occupy the tables and chairs, reading alone and to each other. The computer stations are humming, and fifth grader Brian Bettis is busy checking out books at the desk.

It's family reading night, the first of its kind in the county school system.

In a letter to parents, Burch principal Barry James has invited his school's parents and students to come to the media center after hours two evenings a month to demonstrate the importance of reading in everyday life. "Perhaps more importantly, it's a chance to have fun and invest some quality time in your children and their education here at Burch," he said.

Last Tuesday, the media center, headed by Pat Perkins and Jean Allgood, was abuzz with activity. "The parents have been very responsive," Perkins said. There were families of two, four or more collaborating on books and computer activities. Beginning readers sounded out words to patient parents and accelerated readers checked out the new offerings Perkins had displayed beside the check-out station.

Family reading night is another example of James' reading Renaissance. Each morning, Burch students start their day with 30 minutes of silent reading. In the first 17 days of school, Perkins reported that 5,000 books had been circulated among the school's students. "That's a lot of books," she commented.

The next two reading nights are scheduled for Nov. 3 and Nov. 17 from 6 until 8 p.m.

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