Free books boost literacy skills at Gary school Skip to content
Second grader A'mei Bledsoe 7, (center) leads the boys out of the library with the books the picked up for their moms during the 2nd Annual Mother's Day Book Give Away hosted by School House Children Charities at Glen Park Academy in Gary on May 10, 2024. (John Smierciak/Post-Tribune)
Second grader A’mei Bledsoe 7, (center) leads the boys out of the library with the books the picked up for their moms during the 2nd Annual Mother’s Day Book Give Away hosted by School House Children Charities at Glen Park Academy in Gary on May 10, 2024. (John Smierciak/Post-Tribune)
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Glen Park Academy second graders Aujunique Rice and Kaylani Sanders quickly eyed the assortment of books and picked up Dr. Seuss selections.

“I like Dr. Seuss and I feel like it’s a good book,” said Aujunique. “I like to read and I have a lot of books at home.”

Kaylani agreed. “Dr. Seuss is cool. I always love non-fiction books. It’s like real people,” she said.

Volunteer and retired teacher Dorothy Jean Hardy (left) listens as Second grader Dajari Brewer 8, reads to her during the 2nd Annual Mother's Day Book Give Away hosted by the School House Children Charity at Glen Park Academy in Gary on Friday, May 10, 2024. (John Smierciak/for the Post Tribune)
Volunteer and retired teacher Dorothy Jean Hardy (left) listens as second grader Dajari Brewer 8, reads to her during the 2nd Annual Mother’s Day Book Give Away hosted by School House Children Charities at Glen Park Academy in Gary on May 10, 2024. (John Smierciak/Post-Tribune)

The youngsters sat next to each other gazing at their books Friday in the Glen Park Academy library where they received a free book as part of School House Children’s Charities’ Mother’s Day Book Give Away.

Students in each grade took turns filing into the library and choosing a book from tables scattered about the colorful space. About 650 books were available.

“Every child and teacher is getting a book to build their home library to promote literacy,” said Brian Andreshak, founder and executive director of School House Children’s Charities and also a first-grade teacher at the school.

First grader teacher and School House Children's Charity fonder Brian Andreshak (left) listens to second grader Camron Jackson 7, (right) reads as Brooklyn Beal, 7, (center) waits her turn during the 2nd Annual Mother's Day Book Give Away hosted by the School House Children Charity at Glen Park Academy in Gary on May 10, 2024. (John Smierciak/Post-Tribune)
First grader teacher and School House Children’s Charities founder Brian Andreshak (left) listens to second grader Camron Jackson 7, (right) read as Brooklyn Beal, 7, (center) waits her turn during the 2nd Annual Mother’s Day Book Give Away hosted by the School House Children Charity at Glen Park Academy in Gary on May 10, 2024. (John Smierciak/Post-Tribune)

Andreshak said he purchased the books with grants from Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. and the Legacy Foundation.

This year’s book give-a-way coincides with new Indiana reading mandates that call for the retention of third graders who don’t pass the I-READ annual assessment exam and requires elementary teachers to take an 80-hour professional development course on the science of reading and then pass an exam themselves.

“We’re not happy with it,” Andreshak said the new laws. “It’s just a money-making play. We have to pay $400 if we don’t pass, to take it again.”

Second grader Darrell Cross 8, (center right) holds up a book he picked for his mom during the 2nd Annual Mother's Day Book Give Away hosted by the School House Children Charity at Glen Park Academy in Gary on Friday, May 10, 2024. (John Smierciak/for the Post Tribune)
Second grader Darrell Cross 8, (center right) holds up a book he picked for his mom during the 2nd Annual Mother’s Day Book Give Away hosted by the School House Children Charities at Glen Park Academy in Gary on May 10, 2024. (John Smierciak/Post-Tribune)

Andreshak signed up for the course online and said it took about an hour to get onto the state website.

Instead of the mandates, Andreshak said Indiana should offer universal pre-K. “Build the core skills early on,” he said.

Last year, 52% of the school’s third graders passed the I-READ, the second-best total of Gary’s five elementary schools. Indiana’s statewide pass rate was 82%.

Second graders Kaylani Sanders 8, and Aujuniquen Rice 8, ( l to r) read the books that they picked out for their moms during the 2nd Annual Mother's Day Book Give Away hosted by the School House Children Charity at Glen Park Academy in Gary on Friday, May 10, 2024. (John Smierciak/for the Post Tribune)
Second graders Kaylani Sanders, 8, (left) and Aujunique Rice, 8, read the books that they picked out for their moms during the 2nd Annual Mother’s Day Book Give Away hosted by School House Children Charities at Glen Park Academy in Gary on May 10, 2024. (John Smierciak/Post-Tribune)

The school’s library was shuttered as part of a wave of cost-cutting moves after the Gary Community School Corp. fell under state control in 2017 because of its dire financial status.

The wave of layoffs and cost cuts helped trim the budget deficit, but left students with shrinking literacy options at their schools.

When Glen Park Academy Principal Eric Worthington arrived in 2021, he made reviving the dormant school library a condition of his hiring.

“I said you can’t have a school with a single-digit reading score and not offer literacy,” Worthington said while watching students choose their books.

He spent about $20,000 of school improvement money to buy books. A vendor, Half Price Books in Orland Park, Illinois, donated 20 cases of new books to restock the shelves.

School officials said last year each elementary was reviving its library with redesigns to highlight a theme. In 2023, just 47% of Gary third graders passed the state reading exam.

Housing challenges, poverty, and relationship breakdowns all lead to more transient children in urban districts like Gary.

Worthington said the high student mobility impacts test scores.

Like Andreshak, Worthington thinks holding back third-graders who don’t pass the I-READ is bad policy that will lead to more dropouts.

“Give us the resources to remediate kids,” Worthington said, citing decreased state funding.

Despite the financial struggles, Worthington is proud of the resurrected library that’s seen the addition of hundreds more books in recent years.

“We probably put $60,000 in books into the library. It’s a showcase. It’s the heart of the school,” Worthington said.

“This room is alive. This was a labor of love,” he said of its return.

Carole Carlson is a freelance reporter at the Post-Tribune.