Greater Atlanta Business Community Pulls Together In Support of Citywide Race2Read Literacy Effort & 10-Million-Minute Goal

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Race2Read presenting sponsors, Atlanta Public Schools and Urban League of Greater Atlanta put out a call for support of their literacy initiative and the city’s business community answered. With new businesses, along with civic and educational organizations joining the cause every day, the Race2Read challenge is illustrating how a city can tackle the literacy crisis together.

Engaging the broader community with the Race2Read challenge to boost leisure reading citywide has resulted in a renewed interest in and support of literacy throughout Atlanta; helping the challenge to hit a big milestone toward their 10-million-minute goal, moving past the halfway mark and reaching 7.6 million minutes this April, even amidst another pandemic-challenged school year.

Studies show that literacy is one of the biggest precursors to a child’s success; yet, literacy was a pandemic of its own throughout Atlanta before the Coronavirus disrupted in-person learning a year ago. With more than 800,000 people in the region illiterate, and only 36 percent of Atlanta Public School third-graders reading at grade level, educators and leaders, alike, knew there was no time to waste in closing the literacy gap.

“We must unite schools, families, churches, businesses, and public and private sectors committed to our children’s success. The school systems cannot fix the learning deficit alone. Our children’s success is our success and we must Build A City That Reads so that we can Be A City That Leads,” said Nancy Flake Johnson, President and CEO of the Urban League of Greater Atlanta.

The success seen thus far is in large part due to the support of Race2Read Reading Friends (more than 8,880 participants who actively log reading minutes daily and help spread the word about Race2Read), as well as Literacy Champions (community partners showing their support of literacy and Race2Read with donations, special events and more). Race2Read Literacy Champions include, but are not limited to, Atlanta Speech School, City of Atlanta, Cox Media Group, Everybody Wins! Atlanta, Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, Metropolitan Area Rapid Transit, Page Turners Make Great Learners and, the challenge’s newest champions, Georgia Family Connection and UPS.

In the fall, Page Turners Makes Great Learners partnered with Race2Read and CBS46 to spearhead a community-wide town hall discussion on race with best-selling authors, community leaders, young professionals and students from around the city. Additionally, literacy-focused Atlanta organizations, such as Atlanta Speech School, Brunner, Cox Media Group, Everybody Wins! Atlanta and PTMGL provide virtual author visits and interactive reading events, as well as assisting with book distributions for numerous schools and housing communities throughout the district to ensure reading materials get into the hands of those who need them the most. MARTA recently joined the race, as well, helping promote the challenge with a bus graphic that can be seen rolling around Atlanta.

Continuing with great momentum, in late April UPS will be providing more than 55,000 books through their partner Georgia Family Connection Partnership to be distributed throughout the city, with a portion of those books going to APS students in support of Race2Read.

For more information on how businesses can help directly support the Race2Read challenge through “wish list” items including book donations and more, they can contact APS Media Specialist Jennifer Saunders at jsaunders@atlanta.k12.ga.us. For information on how businesses can become a Race2Read Friend or Literacy Champion, contact Education Advocate Patrice Barlow at EducationEquity@ulgatl.org. Individuals and families can also help by logging their leisure reading minutes daily at Race2Read.org.

Read the story on atlantadailyworld.com.