Real-Life Lit: Pen Pals Share Books — and the Love of Books
In2Books revives the ancient arts of reading and writing.
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Go to My Saved Content.In an age of emails, cell phones, and instant messages, mailboxes seem to yield only bills and junk mail. The In2Books literacy program hopes to change that by reviving a disappearing rite of childhood: exchanging letters with pen pals.
In2Books works with students in grades 2-5 in Washington, DC, building literacy skills through its reading and pen pal program. Each student is assigned a screened adult who volunteers as a literary correspondent and is given five books during the year. Together, the pairs exchange six letters: one to introduce themselves and five others about what they read.
Books in each of the five "cycles" explore a different genre. After reading a biography, for instance, kids may write to their mentors about setting goals and pursuing dreams. A social studies title, on the other hand, could provoke reflections on the idea of community and how kids can contribute to theirs.
Peeking into a mailbox and finding a letter from a pen pal is thrilling for a child, fostering an appreciation for self-expression and sparking connections with faraway communities. But founder and chair Nina Zolt is also attuned to the iPod generation's love of the online world. The program will also offer a dressed-up, all-digital version, complete with online tutorials and resources, for the 2006-2007 school year that will expand nationally. "In2Books will integrate digital literacy with traditional literacy," says Zolt.
The cool curriculum will continue sending copies of books to kids, of course, because turning the pages of a book is the best part of the experience. Plus, "In2Email" doesn't really have the proper ring to it.