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NEWS
The Bookmobile, pictured on its last trip of summer 2016. COURTESY PHOTO
The Wheels on the Bookmobile Go Round and Round
Columbia Falls educators who dispense books from their car celebrate second season  ghting the summer learning slide
BY CLARE MENZEL OF THE BEACON
One sunny afternoon last week, Betsy Kohnstamm, a reading language spe- cialist at Ruder Elementary in Colum- bia Falls, rounded the corner in a quiet neighborhood where three young girls were resting on their bicycle handlebars.
“Let’s stop,” Amy Hanson, a  rst- grade teacher at Ruder said from the backseat, grabbing her phone to crank the pop music on the car’s speakers. She hopped out and waved hello.
“Hi kids,” she said. “Do you want any books? I like your bikes. Have you been reading this summer?”
Tentative at  rst, the girls were drawn over when Kohnstamm began unloading from the trunk tubs of colorful, shiny new books. She kneeled down and helped them  ip through the stacks.
“Have you read Chicka Chicka Boom Boom? How about ‘Pete the Cat’?” Kohn- stamm asked.
“Pete the Cat – I love Pete the Cat,” one girl exclaimed.
Kohnstamm passed a copy over, and after hugging it tight, the girls began reading.
“This is the Bookmobile,” Hanson explained to the girls’ mother, who had come outside to see what all the squeal- ing was about.
The Bookmobile is a summer project that Hanson and Kohnstamm launched to stave o  the “summer learning slide,” the educational losses su ered during
summer vacation. Researchers have attributedupto85percentofthereading achievement gap between peers to access to learning opportunities during school break. Teachers spend between four and six weeks re-teaching material each fall, but the slide can have a long-term impact, as the disparity increases cumulatively over multiple summers to leave some stu- dents years behind in reading skills. Sim- ply reading four books over the summer can e ectively decrease the gap.
Hanson and Kohnstamm had worked for years to put together a summer learn- ing program, but found that “the kids [we] most wanted to come didn’t show up,” Kohnstamm said. The pair realized that if a family wasn’t instilling good reading habits or taking trips to the library, they likely wouldn’t seek out a summer program.
So Kohnstamm and Hanson decided to bring the books to the children, and the Bookmobile was born. In their sec- ond summer, they now have a route with 35 families and serve some 75 students per week with a two-day work schedule. Whenever they spot children at the park or on the sidewalk, they pull over and pass out piles of free books. They o er books for readers of all ages, includ- ing adults, to get parents in the habit of reading. They encourage readers to write their names in the books, take owner- ship, and build their own libraries.
This year, Hanson and Kohnstamm purchased approximately $3,000 worth
of books with the help of donations from the Town Pump Foundation, Rotary Club of Columbia Falls, and Colum- bia Falls School District, as well as two $1,000 grants from Plum Creek and the Dennis and Phyllis Washington Founda- tion. Most books come from Scholastic, though Kohnstamm says she also spent a third of the budget on National Geo- graphic publications. The pair hopes to  nd future funding to convert a retired ambulance or food truck into a true bookstore on wheels.
After the three little Pete the Cat read- ers chose their books, Hanson and Kohn- stamm packed up the tubs for the next stop.
“I love reading books. Read more books. More books, more books,” one girl said as the Bookmobile sped o .
Hanson smiled and called out the win- dow, “Happy reading!”
At a later stop just down the road, a group of girls began dancing when they caught sight of the dark green Honda from their lawn. After they chose their books — copies from Magic Tree House and Magic School Bus series — they sat right down on the grass to read. At each home along the route, parents said their children love the service, and that if they miss a week, “it’s devastating.” The mother of one 13-year-old said her daughter devours her new books and “two days later, she’s asking, ‘Can the Bookmobile come back?’”
clare@ atheadbeacon
AUGUST 17, 2016 // FLATHEADBEACON.COM
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