News-O-Matic's World Read Aloud Day

Reporters at the daily newspaper for kids read their articles for kids across America.

For the 2018 World Read Aloud Day (created by LitWorld), the reporters and writers of News-O-Matic read their daily news articles via Skype to classrooms across the country.

by Russell Kahn
News-O-Matic Editor in Chief

Reading aloud has always been part of the News-O-Matic DNA. Sure, there are multiple levels of text for each article in the daily editions. But it wasn’t enough to just provide the words to the stories. We built a sound studio in our midtown Manhattan newsroom, and we’ve recorded every story — at every level — ever since. We initially added this feature to support the ELL and special education students in schools across the country. But I don’t think I realized at the time how valuable it would be for all kids of all reading abilities and from all over the planet.

So when the opportunity came to promote World Read Aloud Day, we jumped in. It’s the job of any newspaper to promote the events and holidays that shape our world. That includes religious events like Christmas and Ramadan, as well as countrywide observances, such as Independence Day or Memorial Day. For us, that also includes World Read Aloud Day (WRAD).

By covering it like any other news story, it helped us promote the value of reading to our global readership of young students. As part of our coverage, I interviewed Pam Allyn, the founder of LitWorld. “I wish people would know how important reading aloud is,” she told us. The children’s book writer said that “kids feel joy” from the experience. But one critical theme to the story was to tell children that reading aloud does much more than that — that supports language development skills, listening skills, and even writing skills.

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It would have been enough to report on the event of WRAD, including its origins and history. But this was too much in our wheelhouse for us not to get involved ourselves. Every reporter on the News-O-Matic team volunteered to read a couple of their stories out loud to a classroom. This ended up becoming a major thread of the article. How meta!

Writer Mathis Bauchner (a lifelong Patriots fan) read his Eagles Super Bowl preview to a class in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Author Ashley Morgan read her story about a red handfish from Tasmania (one of the rarest species on Earth) to students in Grand Forks, North Dakota. And Ryan Cramer connected with kids in Dallas, Texas, about the world’s longest underwater cave ever discovered in the warm waters of Mexico.

As the Editor-in-Chief, I decided to get a bit more personal with the story. Rather than using Skype to connect with students in another corner of America, I visited a classroom in person. I hopped on a CitiBike downtown to P.S. 19 (Asher Levy School) in New York City’s East Village. There I met with teacher Brenden Messer and his class of 3rd-, 4th-, and 5th-grade students.

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I read two very different articles out loud, each with a direct connection to New York City. First, I read our recently published article about the Women’s March on January 20. Though the event took place in hundreds of cities around the world, New York hosted one of the largest marches; it was impossible not to be aware of it if you were in the city that day.

We interviewed several girls for the story, and hearing their words out loud gave their message an even stronger weight.

Sarah, age 13, attended the protest in Buffalo, New York. “I marched to support every woman for our rights,” she said. “I marched to have a better future.”

“It was really inspiring,” said Parker, age 12. “All the signs showed what people felt they needed to say,” she added. “There were a ton of people, and everyone was chanting and singing,” Parker said. “It was a way to have our voices heard that we want to be treated equally.”

My second story was significant for a very different reason. As part of News-O-Matic’s ongoing series about 1968, I had been researching the life and legacy of Otis Redding. (He died in December 1967, but his song “(Sittin’ on) the Dock of the Bay” would become the first posthumous #1 hit in 1968.) In fact, I had just attended a celebration of Otis Redding at the Apollo Theater. (Otis’s children performed at the concert with a collection of other incredible musicians.) My not-yet-published story was titled “Respect for Otis.”

Personally, I wanted to know if kids actually cared about the history of soul music. Of a song that was recorded more than 50 years ago. Of a voice none of them had ever even remembered hearing before. If I had ever doubted this decision, the kids reaffirmed it tenfold. And speaking to the kids in person, reading them that story, helped also to support why I do what I do, and why I work so hard.

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The kids were captivated by the sound of Otis Redding. They understood his connection to New York City, as the Georgia singer had performed five times on the Apollo stage. And even if it didn’t matter, they actually enjoyed his song — though not so much my attempts to sing his opening verse out loud...

In the end, World Read Aloud Day was one of the greater experiences of our year. I hope we managed to extol the virtues of reading aloud to our growing network of educators, administrators, and students. I know it had an impact on our staff. And we’ve already got WRAD circled on our calendar for 2019.

Huge thanks to LitWorld for promoting this event. As we record 25 “Read-to-Me” files every day (including the levels of English and the translations of Spanish, and French), this is enormously important in our world as well. I’ll continue to do all I can do amplify the message of WRAD — in words and actions, and as loud as I can.

Partner Spotlight: World Vision for Education and Development (Cameroon)

The LitClub members getting ready to create and then unravel their human knot.

The LitClub members getting ready to create and then unravel their human knot.

LitWorld's Director of Program Operations, Ana Stern, on our history with WVED and the outstanding work our partnership coordinator completed over the past year there. We are exceptionally proud of the positive impact the organization is making in Bamenda, Cameroon:

We started our partnership in Cameroon through the A World At School initiative with of TheirWorld in 2014. Fideline Mboringong started off as a LitClub mentor and quickly revealed her ability to mobilize, train, and inspire, and we sought to support her work. Fideline is a resourceful and resilient woman working with World Vision for Education and Development in Bamenda, Cameroon. Currently, we run 9 LitClubs for girls, 2 LitClubs for boys, and 1 co-ed LitClub there, serving over 200 children.

The LitClub members mimicking an owl and having fun.

The LitClub members mimicking an owl and having fun.

Daniel Presenting his fine art.

Daniel Presenting his fine art.

In 2017, schools in the English-speaking areas of Cameroon shut down due to political reasons and safety concerns. Our LitClubs were running in those very schools, but instead of shutting down, Fideline decided that her organization would run the LitClubs at the regularly scheduled times from the WVED offices. And just like that, the LitClubs continued: there was no stopping our story sharing! Because of Fideline’s strong organizational support from WVED, not to mention her leadership skills, commitment, and deep ties with the community, she was able to continue the LitClubs for the entire year last year.

Not only did we run LitClubs, but Fideline organized the first ever LitCamp in Cameroon. For three days, 70 LitCampers engaged around the core theme of Hope, one of LitWorld’s 7 Strengths—knowing their optimism and efforts would produce a positive outcome in the future. During LitCamp, children participated in activities like independent reading, group games, and composition of Hope poems. They even organized Hope-themed drama and theatre projects, and created their own Hope mural.

Nixon catching fun on the guided tour of the Savanna Botanic Gardens during LitCamp.

Nixon catching fun on the guided tour of the Savanna Botanic Gardens during LitCamp.

Fatimatou presenting her Four Square Memory.

Fatimatou presenting her Four Square Memory.

This year, schools are back in session, and the LitClub members are more ready than ever to jump back in. They launched the 2018 LitClubs anxious to fill their new notebooks with stories of their lives, document them in each LitClub session, share with their peers, and put out their work out into the world.

In doing so, they will build their confidence and ability to advocate for their hopes. By documenting their curiosities, they will create the worlds in which they want to belong.

LitCamp Tour: Super Reader Road Trip Begins!

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LitWorld's founder, Pam Allyn, is embarking on the LitCamp Tour: Super Reader Road Trip starting on February 14th! Pam will speak at schools and meet with top administrators to talk about the importance and value of summer learning, and LitCamp's restorative magical values and solutions.

Scholastic is officially sponsoring the trip and will be tweeting and instagramming the journey.

Pam will travel by car with her dog Dewey in the passenger seat. They will journey through the U.S. along a southern route, stopping in Kentucky, West Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas.

The tour will last approximately a month and should be very exciting! Pam is hoping to build even more national awareness for the power of LitCamps and to enroll thousands more children on her way for the LitWorld movement!

Stay tuned for updates from Pam's journey.

Say Hello to Our Newest Sponsor, Storiarts!

We are excited to welcome Storiarts to our big LitWorld family as our newest sponsor. Below, the Storiarts team writes from Oregon, U.S.A.

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Hello LitWorld friends! We are Storiarts, the creators of the Book Scarf, Writing Gloves, and other literary home goods and apparel. Our audience attracts creative-minded, compassionate avid readers and writers, which is why we set out to find a long-term charity to sponsor that cultivates a love of reading and writing worldwide.

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We share LitWorld’s vision to strengthen children and communities through the power of their own stories and to connect people with the love of books, which is why we are so excited that now every Storiarts purchase helps children worldwide learn to read, write, and create. The next chapter in our story is helping kids write their own.

It was a few weeks before Christmas Day in 2011 and our founder Tori Tissell had just graduated from Pratt Institute. In typical recent grad fashion, she was struggling to buy gifts for her family, so she turned to creativity.

Combining her affinity for fashion and inherent love for the literary classics, Tori created the very first Storiarts product: The Pride and Prejudice Book Scarf. Within several months, it became clear that this idea was more than just a one-time hand-crafted gift. It was a product that people wanted in their lives to relive their most treasured stories.

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Storiarts was created by husband and wife team, Chris and Tori Tissell. From 2011 to present day, we’ve built our team from one to ten, and we continue to connect people with their love of books - one literary good at a time. We’ve expanded our product line to a multitude of literary items including gloves, t-shirts, infant apparel, headbands, pillows, and totes.

We hope to continuously provide LitClub Members with books and writing supplies for one year, and follow along various LitClubs across the globe. We plan to participate and advocate World Read Aloud Day, which advocates for literacy as a human right that belongs to all people. Our ultimate goal is to strengthen children and communities through the power of their own stories and to connect people with the love of books.

Pam Allyn Talks Reading Aloud With Doctor Radio

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On Friday, January 12th, our founder Pam Allyn spoke live with the hosts of Doctor Radio's "Child Psychiatry/Psychology: About Our Kids" program on Sirius XM.

"Reading has always been about that idea of personal freedom and taking chances in very safe spaces," said Pam, "I find a personal power in what I read—narrative is a comfort and an inspiration, and I want all children to have that."

The program included a lively discussion of child brain development, early literacy skills, educational tools, and LitWorld's signature day of advocacy: World Read Aloud Day.

"Books don't always have to be this heavy thing for kids where they worry about taking a test after reading them," Pam said, "At some point, reading is hard for all of us. For children who struggle with reading, we must ask them what it would take to make it easier. Some will answer that the book they're reading is boring or difficult to follow—these are very different answers, and they require different approaches from parents and teachers."

The program is available to stream on-demand now.

Shannon Miller's World Read Aloud Day

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One of my favorite events every year is LitWorld's World Read Aloud Day.  This year we are celebrating on February 1st, 2018.

Over the last eight years, I have read, celebrated, learned, connected and created with others around the world in honor of World Read Aloud Day and literacy.  

One of the best parts of World Read Aloud Day for me are the connections that libraries and school communities make with other children, teachers, librarians, authors, illustrators, and friends from around the world.  Whether it is listening to them read, reading a book together, or singing along to the words, the celebration of reading aloud is what we lift up on this day.

When I was in the Van Meter Library, we connected with several of our favorite authors over the years, including Seymour Simon, Tom Angelberger, Cece Bell, Erica Perl, Donna Gephart, Laurel Synder, Jesse Klausmeier, and many others.

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We Skyped with our friends in Iowa, Georgia, Chicago, Florida, Philadelphia, New York, Texas, Connecticut, Australia, China, Oman and others around the world.

During one of our visits to a school in Florida this year, we will be having a little "Pig Party," including farm themed books and eBooks—and a visit with a special Iowa friend named Bacon, a pot-bellied pig.  

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The Collaborative Google Doc

As you and your school community plan World Read Aloud Day, Andy Plemmons, Matthew Winner and myself have created a Google Document for all of us to start making plans with others around the world. This year we have done something that will be super helpful to all of you: there is now a Table of Contents for Time Zones, which will help when connecting and planning. Teachers and WRAD participants can click on the time zone that they want and the page will jump forward to the proper place in the Google Doc. Underneath a particular time zone, there is an area for users to add their information.

The World Read Aloud Day 2018 Google Doc can be found here.

Skype in the Classroom + Buncee

I also have a very special new project to share with you, from two of my favorite educational resources to use as a teacher and librarian, Buncee and Skype in the Classroom.

This year, Skype in the Classroom and Buncee are joining forces to celebrate World Read Aloud Day with a global literacy peace project for your library, classroom, and community.

 As Buncee's Teacher Librarian Advocate and a Skype Master Teacher, I couldn't be more excited to share this news and to tell you how you and your students can be part of this project too.

It is called the Skype + Buncee Literacy Project! It is our brand new Buncee Buddies project to kick off 2018. Students will be collaborating, creating and sharing poems with an answer to the question, How Do I Model Peace In My Community?

As shared on the project page on the Skype in the Classroom site:

Words have the power to change our world. Reading & writing have the power to build bridges, foster understanding, and spark ideas. For World Read Aloud Day 2018, Skype in the Classroom and Buncee are asking you to join classrooms from all around to celebrate literacy by coming together to read, write, and spread peace.

Go to the Skype + Buncee Literacy Project page to read all of the details and register to join.

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We are already sharing on the #skypebunceebuddies hashtag on social media, and don't forget to use the official hashtag, #WorldReadAloudDay, in your posts too.  

Students' poems will be added to the Skype + Buncee Literacy Project Buncee Board, and I can't wait to read and share them too. You will find our Buncee Board here

Remember, be creative and have fun with this project.

LitWorld would love for us to connect with authors through Skype in the Classroom for World Read Aloud Day, and this project is now part of the wonderful ways we can connect using Skype.  

The sky is the limit and the possibilities to connect are endless. We will celebrate literacy while connecting and creating for World Read Aloud Day globally throughout the year with Buncee and Skype in the Classroom. 

Empower your students to share peace in the community and throughout the world in 2018 by being part of our project too! 

Have a wonderful time planning World Read Aloud Day, friends. I hope we get to connect too.

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Shannon McClintock Miller is a teacher-librarian who serves as the Future Ready Librarians and Project Connect Spokesperson working with librarians, educators and students around the country, in person and online every day. She is Buncee's Teacher Librarian Advisor and Cantata Learning's Teacher Librarian Advocate. Shannon is the author of the award-winning The Library Voice blog and recently published her first four children’s books about library skills with Cantata Learning. And her most favorite thing: she is blessed mom and wife.  

Bridging Communities With the WRAD-ical Power of Tech

This year, World Read Aloud Day is on February 1st.

Thanks to a growing list of partners and sponsors, this global holiday has reached hundreds of thousands of kids and their parents and teachers in over 100 countries.

In 2018, the advent of technology in the classroom—seen as a novel innovation only a few years ago—has become commonplace in many schools, and it's changing the way we celebrate the joy of reading aloud in a big way.

Schedule a Read-Aloud With An Author in Your Classroom

This year, Skype in the Classroom has made it easier than ever to book a virtual author visit to a classroom anywhere on the planet through their website. Make your World Read Aloud Day truly memorable for your students by interacting with a real, live Children's Literature author.

Students in Brooklyn, New York celebrate World Read Aloud Day 2017 by donning their self-made Reading Crowns.

Students in Brooklyn, New York celebrate World Read Aloud Day 2017 by donning their self-made Reading Crowns.

Coordinate with Other Educators And Bring Classrooms Together

Teachers and fans of World Read Aloud Day have banded together to create an expansive, community-run Google Doc, and it is being used to organize cooperative read-aloud events in celebration of the holiday. Introduce your students to a new classroom via the internet, read aloud to each other, ask each other questions, and empower your communities.


Tools like video chat and community-built Google Docs have spurred World Read Aloud Day's growth, making it a truly worldwide celebration of community, humanity, storytelling, and joy.

For more information and useful resources, visit litworld.org/wrad.