Friday, August 11, 2017

Dogs teaching kids how to read

The Artdog Images of Interest
My Images of Interest this month spotlight creative and unconventional approaches to teaching that have been gaining traction in schools, libraries, and other places devoted to teaching--including our own homes, if we share them with children.

Literacy dogs:
By now, the science is pretty well settled: reading to a calm, accepting dog (or other animal) really does help children learn to read better. Here's a video that covers most of the important things about kids reading to dogs.


My first video is about therapy dogs of R.E.A.D., Reading Education Assistance Dogs, from Intermountian Therapy Animals, an organization started in Salt Lake City, UT in 1999. It's a group I've blogged about before.




But now for a little something different: how about a dog who inspires children to read--by reading, himself?



Meet Fernie, whose owner Nik Gardner (headmaster of the school where Fernie works) chose him for his temperament, and taught him not only to be a literacy-support therapy dog, but to respond without verbal cues to commands that are printed on flash cards. He'd learned to read four different commands ("Sit," "Down," "Roll Over," and "Spin") when they were featured in The Telegraph in February 2016, but Gardner vowed then to teach him more.



Regular readers of this blog will remember I've featured literacy dogs before. Just sayin'--they do their work well. You'll probably see them featured here again!

IMAGES AND VIDEOS: Many thanks to VOA for the video and photo of the R.E.A.D. program in the New York City Public Schools. Thanks also to The Telegraph, and to SWNS TV, photographer David Hedges and YouTube for the information, video, and photo of Nik Gardner with Fernie.

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