Mentoring is for Everyone
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Literacy Champions (LC)

Literacy Champions (LC), who are volunteer coordinators, have an opportunity to give volunteer opportunities to people who are often overlooked.  When considering how to expand the impact of your organization/business/church, don’t forget to be creative.

Remember:  To be a volunteer, all a person needs is to: see the need, care about children, and be able to read at a reasonable level.

Being a reading mentor may be a perfect role for:

Grandmas and Grandpas

They may be well past their camp counselor days, but they know that they still have much to offer. Who better to be a reading mentor than someone who has free time in the middle of the day, knows better than anyone what is most important in life, and just happens to have spent a lifetime reading books to children and grandchildren?  

Stay-at-home parents

Once those toddlers grow a little and head off to preschool, that house can feel empty and quiet.  Sure, privacy might be a nice reprieve, but eventually, everyone must know they are making a difference.  Taking a one-hour break to walk down to the public school once a week and be a reading mentor might be what the doctor ordered.

Teenagers

We like to say that being a reading mentor is the perfect job for anybody 17-75 years old, but really, the number is far beyond that. There are teenagers (sometimes ones who don’t feel like the “cool kids”) who want to serve. Be they academic, active, or apathetic, being the new best friend to a 9-year-old might be just what they need.

Swing-shift workers

Nine-to-five careers allow volunteers to take a 1-hour lunch break to read to kids, but people who work non-traditional hours have even more freedom during school hours.

These are just a few groups of people who would make great reading mentors. Now that the creative juices are flowing, who else would be helpful? 

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