
Michelle H. Martinâs had kids moving, creating and reading across the state this past summer, including the camp's first foray into a public library.
Martin, the iSchoolâs Beverly Cleary Professor for Children and Youth Services, has run the day camps with Rachelle D. Washington for kids ages 4 to 11 since 2009, when both were on the faculty at Clemson University in South Carolina. Read-a-Rama is a nonprofit that promotes literacy by using books as the springboard for hands-on activities, such as crafts and sing-alongs. Martinâs motto is â100 percent engagement, 100 percent of the time.â
Martin and Washington have typically run the camps at churches and community centers with high numbers of children from low-income households. This year, librarians Gwendolyn Haley (MLIS, â00), Mary Ellen Braks and Melanie Boerner adapted the program for a series of seven weeklong half-day camps at the .
âWe know we have some schools where kids are really struggling with reading,â said Braks, the libraryâs public services manager for early learning. âWe thought if there was any way we could help over the summer other than just saying âkeep reading,â that might really help the kids keep up their skill levels.â
Boerner, the libraryâs literacy coordinator, adapted Martinâs model for a series of weeklong half-day camps coordinated with the libraryâs free-lunch program. The camps had room for 16 children each week for seven weeks, and they filled up surprisingly fast, Boerner said. Campers took turns at tables where camp counselors â a trio of AmeriCorps VISTA volunteers â assisted them with activities such as painting and making gooey, green slime. Thirty minutes each day were devoted to âDEAR time,â for Drop Everything And Read.

âWe always had books available to them, and we asked them for that 30 minutes to find a book and sit down and read, or a counselor would read for them,â Boerner said.
Gwendolyn Haley, the libraryâs public services manager for education and enrichment, said it was rewarding to see children who were enthusiastic about the program and excited to be there for the books, not just the slime.
âThis is the only program weâve ever done where we actually have the kids sit down and read as part of our summer reading program,â Haley said. âHaving the kids come back and be excited about books for three hours a day was awesome.â
Martin helped the Spokane librarians plan their camps and paid them a visit to share feedback once they were up and running.
âWhen I visited the Spokane site, I was thrilled that it looked, felt and sounded like Camp Read-a-Rama, and the kids were having a ball,â she said.
More photos from Camp Read-a-Rama Spokane: