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Changing Children's Lives With the Gift of Literacy

Changing Children's Lives With the Gift of Literacy

Imagine a young child receiving a book in the mail every month until the age of five. What better way to say reading is important? Children enrolled in the Ferst Program receive a new book every month in the mail until their 5th birthday. There is absolutely no cost (ever) to registered children in participating areas! The program is made possible through the partnership with local, all-volunteer Community Action Teams (CATs).

Ferst Readers is a 501C3 organization whose funding is provided through private donations, corporate sponsorships, and grants. Contact us to help with a local program or get a new one started in your area so that we may work together to bring the gift of literacy to every child from birth-5 years old. Partnering together, we can help prepare every child for success in school and in life.

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  • For Parents

    The single most important activity for building the knowledge required for eventual success in reading is reading aloud to children. Read More >>>
     
  • Program Overview

    Our Mission: Strengthening communities by providing quality books and literacy resources for children and their families to use at home during the earliest stages of development. Read More >>>
  • Get Involved

    Approximately 61 percent of low-income families do not have a single piece of reading material suitable for a child. Find out how you can help. Read More >>>
     

Children Who Read Succeed

  • Children develop much of their capacity for learning in the first three years of life, when their brains grow to 90 percent of their eventual adult weight. Source: Karoly, et al


Learning to read is a process much like learning to speak or walk. The process begins at birth. Children associate sounds with letters. They associate pictures with words. They learn how books work, reading left to right and turning pages. These are all steps along the way in learning to read. Long before a child begins formal education there are already children far ahead of the curve and even more lagging behind. 

 

  • The single most important activity for building the knowledge required for eventual success in reading is reading aloud to children. Source: Commission on Reading


If daily reading begins at birth, by the time the child is 5 years old he or she has been given roughly 900 hours of literacy preparation. Reduce that time and the child loses hours of nursery rhymes, fairy tales, and stories. All those words missed! No teacher, no matter how talented, can make up for those lost hours. 

Hours of reading books by age 5:

    • 30 minutes daily = 900 Hours
    • 30 minutes weekly = 130 Hours
    • Less than 30 minutes weekly = 60 Hours
      Source: U.S. Department of Education, America Reads Challenge
  • An average child growing up in a lower income family hears one half to one third as many spoken words as children in more affluent households. Source: Hart & Risley 1995


Research shows that the size of a child’s vocabulary is a strong predictor of reading ability. Preschoolers with large vocabularies become better readers. A child’s vocabulary grows through interaction and reading with parents or caregivers. The experience of reading with a loved one is one that children will remember for a lifetime.

Suggested Reading

Visit your local library to find these titles and many more wonderful books that will delight the whole family and provide hours of reading enjoyment.

Birth to 3 Years Old

Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?

Brown Bear Brown Bear

Goodnight Gorilla

Good Night Gorilla

 

Pat the Bunny

Pat the Bunny

 

The Very Hungry Caterpillar

Very Hungry Caterpillar

 

The I Love You Book

I Love You Book

 

Piggies

Piggies

 

Lola at the Library

Lola at the Library

 

How Do Dinosaurs Count to 10?

How Do Dinos 10

 

Dr.Seuss's A B C

Dr Seuss ABC

 

Goodnight, Goodnight Construction Site

Good Night Construction

 

Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus!

Dont Let the Pigeon Bus

 

Ten Little Fingers, Ten Little Toes

Ten Little Fingers Toes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4 & 5 Years Old

The Napping House

Napping House

 

In the Small, Small Pond

Small Small Pond

 

The Snowy Day

Snowy Day

 

Wonky Donkey

Wonky Donkey

 

Koala Lou

Koala Lou

 

When Sophie Gets Angry Really, Really Angry

When Sophie Gets Angry

 

Peter's Chair

Peters Chair

 

Go Away Big Green Monster!

Go Away Monster

 

Are You My Mother?

Are You My Mother

 

Froggy Gets Dressed

Froggy Gets Dressed

 

Bark  George

Bark George

 

The Hat

The Hat

 

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Thank you for visiting Ferst Readers!

Ensuring that children develop early literacy skills is one of the most important things we can do - as parents, as teachers - and as a society.

Won't you help us make a difference?

Adopt a reader today!   Make a Donation!