Hello Literacy Land readers! This is Wendy from Read With Me ABC. For many of you October is the month for pumpkins, scarecrows, and trick-or-treating. However, if you're a reading specialist, you may be thinking more about hosting your annual Title I Reading Night.
Today's post was written to offer you a few ideas for hosting a successful Title I night.
Another option is to invite the whole family and make the evening a family literacy night.
Purchase door prizes and hold a raffle for those in attendance.
Give favors for every Title I student present. At my school each student who attended this year's event received a book basket, a clip-on book light, and the choice of a new book.
Best of luck with planning your literacy night. I hope it's an overwhelming success!
Do you have a really great idea for hosting a Title I Night? We'd love to hear from you! Please share your thoughts in the comments below.
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Today's post was written to offer you a few ideas for hosting a successful Title I night.
Pick the (Perfect) Night
Plan your event to coincide with another school event. Many successful Title I nights are scheduled to occur right before another school event. This helps to ensure that the event is well attended. For example, if the PTO is hosting Bingo in the gym at 7:00, then schedule your event for 6:00 or 6:30 in the library on the same night. More parents are likely to attend if they are already planning to come to school that evening.Promote it!
- Ask for your event to be published on the school calendar.
- Post the event in your school's monthly newsletter.
- Send out "save the date" cards well in advance.
- Be sure to include an RSVP on the actual invitation. This is helpful for two reasons: it asks parents to make a commitment, and it gives you a headcount for planning.
- Send home a reminder on the day of the event. Consider printing reminders on sheets of adhesive labels. Affixing the labels to students' shirts is quick and effective.
- If your school has the capability, send an automated telephone alert.
Provide Babysitting or Invite Students
Parents may have difficulty finding or paying for a baby sitter. Many schools offer complimentary babysitting during the event.Another option is to invite the whole family and make the evening a family literacy night.
Provide Dinner
Who doesn't like having dinner prepared for them? By removing the stress of planning dinner, parents are more likely to attend. Keep it simple. Offer pizza and a beverage.Choose a Fun Theme
Make your event sound too fun to resist. ;) Some ideas include a Literacy Luau, a Book Swap, and a Night of Family Literacy (NFL football theme).Keep It Short
Make sure your presentation is meaningful, relevant, and succinct. This is especially important if children are invited. Consider adding hands-on stations where more information can be provided. At our most recent literacy night, we held a short presentation followed by three stations that parents and children could visit: make-and-take, literacy games (Boggle, Bananagrams, etc.), and technology (laptops and iPads).Plan a Make-and-Take Station
Parents will appreciate bringing home activities that they can use with their children. Students will enjoy the chance to be creative. Some items you may wish to include: a ring with comprehension questions on it, sight word or vocabulary games, a non-fiction question cube, and a fluency jar.Involve Parents
Ask a few parents to help with the night. For example, you might consider asking them to oversee a Make-and-Take station.Include Classroom Teachers
Ask classroom teachers for ideas for the Make-and-Take portion of the night. There may be specific items they would like parents/students to have at home. Invite teachers to attend and help with a station.Offer Attendance Incentives
Offer free tickets to an upcoming school event. For example, give tickets for a free game at Fall Fair or a certificate for a free book at the Book Fair.Purchase door prizes and hold a raffle for those in attendance.
Give favors for every Title I student present. At my school each student who attended this year's event received a book basket, a clip-on book light, and the choice of a new book.
Best of luck with planning your literacy night. I hope it's an overwhelming success!
Do you have a really great idea for hosting a Title I Night? We'd love to hear from you! Please share your thoughts in the comments below.