
Real Men Read
Clip: Season 1 Episode 197 | 4m 6sVideo has Closed Captions
A program to get kids excited about learning to read.
A program to get kids excited about learning to read.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Kentucky Edition is a local public television program presented by KET

Real Men Read
Clip: Season 1 Episode 197 | 4m 6sVideo has Closed Captions
A program to get kids excited about learning to read.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipYou know, children will often notice and copy the things they see adults doing, especially the adults they respect.
And that's the idea behind Real Men.
Read a program involving the United Way and Somerset to teach young people that you're never too young to benefit from books.
This one is for the Cat in the Surprise Teacher.
Real Men Read is something we started this year, thanks to a grant from the General Literacy Foundation.
This is a program that other united Ways across the country have done, but it's unique in every community.
So in our community, what we've done is purchase books for each school in our local community in Pulaski County that will be donated to their library and then at Hopkins Elementary School, and it's on to independent school.
We have male volunteers in our community who are positive Well, male role models going into the classrooms one time per month and reading those books to students.
We know that early education is vital for future success, and literacy is such an important part of that.
So we put a lot of thought into the books that we chose.
We worked with the librarian here, Miss Calder, but we wanted to make sure that they were going to be engaging books for the students because learning to read is hard.
But the more fun that you can make that and the more exciting that literacy can be, the better it sets them up for success.
Pete loves cookies, Pete loves five feet, loves brownies, cakes, marshmallow treats, and ice cream sundaes.
A lot of our students in and, well, in Annie and General in any elementary school don't have a lot of male mentors or leadership, especially supporting their early literacy and United Ways brought this program to us and the excitement and anticipation in our children.
I've proof that it's very much needed and then the males that come are very important to and read to the classes are very important to supporting this early childhood literacy.
I think it's really important for students to see men in different career paths and that reading is important for all of those career paths.
So we've had volunteers who are in the insurance industry, who are in health care, who are in finance, who are in excavating just a real variety.
And reading is essential to all of those.
So it lets them see a different side of education, how education is applicable to real life, and not just education in a classroom.
I think reading is such a fundamental part of every child's education, and if we can play a small part in that process to improve the reading skills of our children in our community, then it's all worth it.
And it opens up so many windows for their future academic growth.
I hope that they take away from the fact that there are adults out there that care for them that's outside.
They're their teachers and their principals, and that no matter what, no matter how old you are, you know, it is cool to read, no matter if it's an elementary style book or if it's an adult book or whatever, you know, that that literacy is something that you need to have.
Yes.
As the class loves art here.
We know that getting students interested in reading sets them up for success in all areas of life.
You can't fill out a job application if you can't read the application.
So even something that simple is a barrier if people can't read.
It is my heart's desire and my deep hope that every student in our building sees the need and the love and how much growth they can have.
But all the people around him, them who actually read and that they would fall in love with reading so that they can fall in love with a book, they can disappear.
And whatever they are doing in that day or whatever is going around on around them, they can disappear in that book.
And whatever's happening in that book.
Is the highlight of my monthly calendar, and I wouldn't miss it for the world sometimes.
Cool.
The United Way's goal is to expand this program to every school in Pulaski County.
Amtrak Plans Include Louisville
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 4m 10s | Amtrak's new rail plans include passenger trains to Louisville, Kentucky. (4m 10s)
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 27s | For the first time in a month, there are no counties with high COVID activity. (27s)
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 2m 35s | House Bill 547 and Senate Bill 49. (2m 35s)
Financial Aid for Education Majors
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 2m 41s | Hardin Country schools offers financial aid to graduates majoring in education. (2m 41s)
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 3m 25s | House Bill 542 would prevent gun-free zones on Kentucky college campuses. (3m 25s)
HB 319 Clears Budget Committee
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 55s | House Bill 319 seeks to help fill vacant positions in the teacher workforce. (55s)
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 1m 39s | Kentucky Senate moved two bills that seek to improve the juvenile justice facilities. (1m 39s)
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 24s | Minor league baseball team Lexington Legends is now known as Lexington Counterclocks. (24s)
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 1m 31s | Kentucky continues to clean up and power up after last Friday's storms and high winds. (1m 31s)
Morehead Receives $3 Million Grant
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 24s | Federal government is giving Morehead university $3M to help fund healthcare programs. (24s)
Political Ad Targeting Cameron
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 1m 7s | What appears to be the first negative TV ad in the governor's race. (1m 7s)
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 34s | House Bill 386, dealing with road safety, goes to the full house. (34s)
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Clip: S1 Ep197 | 35s | Public workers across all three branches of state government could see another pay raise. (35s)
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