Learning to read and to practice compassion
Program says dogs in class help children build skills, confidence
Four-year-old Knox is one of the “pet ambassadors” who travel to Westport Academy Elementary/Middle School every Tuesday to listen to students read as part of an effort to improve their reading skills and their self-esteem.
Organizers say practicing reading with dogs promotes confidence among students who may struggle to read at grade level. The Maryland Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, one of the country’s oldest animal welfare groups, has
“I was one of those kids growing up that reading out loud was scary for me,” said Katie Flory,
Similar programs are catching on across the country.
Fewer than 5 percent of students at Westport passed the English Language Arts portion of the statewide assessments last year. Flory said it’s too early to measure what effect reading to dogs might
“I can say that interest in reading has definitely increased,” she said.
The experience also changed students’ feelings toward reading aloud. At the beginning of the study, students told the researchers that they felt self-conscious, clumsy and uncomfortable reading out loud. By the end, they described it as fun and cool, and said they felt more relaxed when reading to a dog.
When Knox, the pit bull, and Lucy Gaga, a Boston terrier, walk through the Westport doors, they’re immediately enveloped by students who are excited to read to them, pet them, and cuddle with them on fuzzy carpets in the school’s multipurpose room.
“The students always look forward” to reading to the dogs, third-grade teacher Kelsey Stritzinger said. “Their faces light up anytime I say, ‘We have SPCA today.’?”
Deasia Allen, a 10-year-old fifth-grader, said she has become a more confident reader since the dogs started showing up at her school. She likes it so much that she started reading to her own dog at home. She said
“My dog never gets up and says, ‘I want to leave, this is boring,’ ” Deasia
About 200 Westport students read to the dogs on an alternating, biweekly schedule.
As they read, Lucy Gaga weaves underneath the plastic blue chairs. Nearby, Knox sits in his doggy bed, while students lean over to pet him.
The books tie into larger lesson plans taught by SPCA staff
The SPCA hopes to leave students with more compassion for animals and one another. The students go on field trips to the shelter, and learn how to show love and care to
Researchers say animal abuse indicates a person is more likely to turn to violence against people.
Animal abuse is reported around Westport at a greater rate than in the city as a whole. In the Westport, Mount Winans and Lakeland neighborhoods,
“I like how the children respond to the whole idea of being compassionate to animals,” Locke said. “If they’re compassionate to animals, the connection will be made to be compassionate to fellow human beings.”
Locke said she notices students behaving more gently toward one another when
The program is funded with a $15,000 grant from the the Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation. The foundation’s Baltimore Library Project has transformed libraries at 14 middle and elementary schools in recent years.
The SPCA hopes to expand the program to more Weinberg libraries in coming years.
“It’s helped some of our more shy students come out of their shells,” said Rachel Duden, a program associate with the foundation. “Reading to the dogs and not feeling like they have to be scared has helped them improve.”