Reading Success by Fourth Grade

Springfield Story Walks

Springfield Story Walks

Bringing books to families and neighborhoods

Literacy is constructed by our community! Reading, writing, storytelling, rhyming, singing, talking, listening happens in our homes, our neighborhoods, and across our city. Springfield Story Walks is a project by Reading Success by 4th Grade and our community partners to bring books to families and neighborhoods.

 

The Springfield Story Walks project features complete children’s books, in their original full-color page format, installed in outdoor community settings. Some installations will be temporary and may move across the city. Others are semi-permanent and books may change over time.


Kids and families can walk along the path, read together, talk about and make connections to the book, their lives, and the world. The
StoryWalk concept was created by Anne Ferguson of Montpelier, Vermont and developed in collaboration with the Kellogg-Hubbard Library. StoryWalk is a registered services mark owned by Ferguson. Reading Success by 4th Grade will be opening more across the city in a variety of locations. Check back here for the newest pop-up Story Walks, and to make sure you visit them all!

Locations

Springfield Story Walks in the News

By Talene Jermakian November 9, 2020
Below is a Guest Viewpoint featured in The Republican. Click here to read the article on MassLive.
By Talene Jermakian October 29, 2020
Mayor Sarno Joined with the Springfield Library’s Reading Success by 4th Grade Program to Kick off the Story Walks Series Read on City's website Mayor Domenic J. Sarno joined with the Springfield Library’s Reading Success by 4th Grade program for the unveiling of their Story Walks series. The first installation is at the Gardening the Community’s Walnut Street Farm Store and Garden at 200 Walnut Street. The program has partnered with local sites to post laminated pages of children’s books in sequence so families can walk along, see, and read each page of the story together, promoting exercise and early literacy in a socially distanced way. Sites include Gardening the Community, the Springfield Symphony’s office windows, and the East Forest Park Branch Library’s windows. Mayor Sarno stated, “This is such a great program for our children and families. It is so nice to see that even amid this COVID-19 Coronavirus pandemic our dedicated Springfield Library’s and community partners have gotten creative in making this successful reading program available for families through this new Story Walks series which will be opening up throughout our City, starting first here at the Gardening the Community’s Walnut Street Farm Store and Garden.” Also attending the event were City Councilors Tim Allen and Jesse Lederman, Chrissy Howard, Manager for Reading Success by 4th Grade, Zee Johnson of Olive Tree Books N Voices, and Tye Weir of Springfield Rise Academy.
October 29, 2020
Read Story on WWLP by: Sy Becker SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (WWLP) – The love for children reading is a fast-growing commodity at Springfield’s Gardening the Community building in the city’s Old Hill neighborhood. The organization is responsible for a program called “Reading Success by 4th Grade,” built on their success today with a new literacy project. Gardening the Community on Walnut street now holds a book called “The Ugly Vegetables.” “There’s a book in its entirety in its original form available for families to just walk in and read and read a book together,” said Chrissy Howard, manager of Reading Success by 4th grade. “So we’re advocating for folks to do that socially distanced obviously.” Their new literacy project is called ‘Springfield Story Walks’, featuring full-color pages from a variety of children’s books.
October 29, 2020
Read on MassLive By Elizabeth Román | eroman@repub.com SPRINGFIELD — Lined up along the outer wall of Gardening the Community at 200 Walnut St. is a laminated copy of Somerville author Grace Lin’s “The Ugly Vegetables.” The book has been taken apart so that the pages sit side by side. “We want families to be able to relate the book to the place they are visiting,” said Chrissy Howard, program manager for Reading Success by 4th Grade. “In this case we are at the beautiful GTC Farm Store, so the book talks about farming and gardening and vegetables.” Reading Success, Springfield’s community-wide early literacy initiative, has launched an initiative to get families out into the community reading books and enjoying the many family-friendly locations Springfield has to offer. Springfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno stopped by the farm store on Thursday to check out the first location for Springfield Story Walks. “Connecting literacy, young people and families and making those pathways is so important,” he said. “So they are here on Walnut Street and then can go to the East Forest Park Library, then Symphony Hall, so then all of a sudden the book you have like ‘Ugly Vegetables’ has a great story to tell. The more you are able to read, the more you are able to learn.” Zee Johnson, owner of Olive Tree Books-n-Voices in Springfield, and Tyeshia Weir, a parent liaison and family literacy advocate leader for the reading initiative, both did short read-a-louds to demonstrate how families can engage with the book and the space they are in. Howard said the Springfield Story Walks project will feature original full-color pages from children’s books installed in outdoor community settings, where families can walk along a path and read together. “You don’t have to own the book, you don’t have to touch anything,” Howard said. “You can just stand outside enjoying the location and reading the book which will in some way connect to the space you’re in." “This is a safe, socially distanced activity that families can do together,” she said. “We will also have copies of the book available at each of our library branches in case families want to reread them at home.” The first Story Walk will be at Gardening the Community through the fall. Families can learn where the next pop-up Story Walk location will be by joining the city’s 413Families text program, or checking news sites and the city library system website. Howard said the initiative will also feature raffle prizes for each location. Raffles will be announced through 413Families. “These are prizes we purchase from the organization and will raffle off,” she said. “We try to make sure we are making it mutually beneficial for that organization to offer their space. I’m very passionate about working with organizations, especially those run by people of color or women or small business owners, and that they be compensated for their time and energy.” Those who visit the Walnut Street Story Walk may run into Fatiha Muhammad, the youth development manager at the Gardening the Community greenhouse. “I find this work to be very rewarding,” she said. "I can put something into the ground and watch it come up right in front of me. I’m feeding my community, people who look like me, people who don’t look like me, people with more or less resources than me, and I think that’s super important.” Muhammad said she hopes people will take advantage of the opportunity to visit the farm store and not only read the story, but also get a look at the youth working in the greenhouse. “People talk about police brutality and racial injustice and systemic problems,” she said, “but if you really look into it you can see all of a community’s struggles through their food and what kind of food is available to them. We are bridging the gap and bringing people together through affordable, locally grown food.” The Story Walk concept was created by Anne Ferguson of Montpelier, Vermont, and developed in collaboration with the Kellogg-Hubbard Library. Howard said she is excited to bring the concept to Springfield. Earlier this summer, the Campaign for Grade-Level Reading announced that Springfield was one of 21 communities nationwide to be recognized with national Pacesetter Honors for supporting early school success, with exemplary work in the categories of Big Tent Collaboration and Messaging and Communications. Springfield was also named a Pacesetter Bright Spot for School Readiness.
October 20, 2020
Click here to read the story on BusinessWest.com
Share by: