Rea students garner national reading award
Marisa O’Neil
Rea Elementary School was one of five schools nationwide to receive
an award last week recognizing their reading program.
Students at the school, principal Kurt Suhr said, have become more
motivated to read on their own time since they started the program
five years ago. The school won the Renaissance Solutions Award at a
national conference in Orlando, Fla., for the program’s manufacturer.
“To receive this award is huge,” said Jenny Burks, the Renaissance
Learning facilitator for the school. “The success goes to our
teachers for implementing the program and to our students for being
successful in the program.”
Representatives of Rea, including Burks and Suhr, flew to Florida
for the conference and to receive the award. Nationwide, Suhr said,
500 schools applied for it.
“We look at how well a school has improved over the past two years
and look how they’ve done beyond that, overall,” Renaissance Learning
Inc. spokesman Jonas Berberich said of the award.
Rea uses the Accelerated Reader and Accelerated Math software and
materials to help students at the school, which serves fourth, fifth
and sixth graders.
The school receives federal Title I funds for low-income students.
Though a majority of its students are English learners, Suhr said,
many are avid readers.
“After truly implementing the program, our circulation in the
library has gone from 350 books a day to 760 books a day,” Suhr said.
“There’s really a positive environment for reading at our school.
Students want to read before school, on recess, at lunch, after
school.”
Students at Rea have a mandatory 60 minutes of reading a day and
another 30 for homework, Suhr said. The Accelerated Reader program
helps keep them accountable, he said.
Teachers and students monitor progress with detailed data and
reports, Suhr said. Seeing improvement in their skills helps keep the
students motivated, he said.
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