
Five honored as ‘Literacy
Leaders’
Rep.
Gilda Cobb-Hunter, Rep. Lanny Littlejohn, Rachel Hodges, Tommy
Preston and Dr. Dan Barron were honored by the University of
South Carolina and the state’s library community Thursday,
Sept. 13, with Literacy Leaders Awards for their work to improve
literacy in South Carolina.
The inaugural ceremony for the annual awards was held at the South
Carolina State Library. Charles Bierbauer, dean of the College
of Mass Communications & Information Studies, presented the
awards.
“Each of our honorees has recognized that literacy is the ‘A’ in
the ABCs of building a child’s confidence, capability and
prospects for success,” Bierbauer said. “We call these
leaders ‘stars’ in our literacy initiative, but we’d
like to put everyone in the state into the constellation of stars
that it will take to ensure bright futures for our children and
their families.”
The awards were created as part of the School of Library and Information
Science’s Children, Libraries and Literacy Initiative, a
$6 million campaign launched in 2005 to eliminate illiteracy across
South Carolina.
Cobb-Hunter and Littlejohn have championed the creation and funding
of the Augusta Baker Chair in Childhood Literacy, a key component
of the Children, Libraries and Literacy Initiative. Their efforts
resulted in a $1.5 million appropriation that helped create the
endowment for the chair.
Cobb-Hunter, a social worker and community
activist, has represented her Orangeburg district since 1992.
Littlejohn,
who represents the Spartanburg area, is an educator, having served
as an elementary school principal, teacher and coach.
Hodges, a Hartsville native, created her well-known and successful
Reading with Rachel program in 1999 when she was first lady of
South Carolina. As part of the program, she visited more than 250
classrooms in the state and distributed more than 500,000 books.
Reading with Rachel was also a featured program on S.C. Educational
Radio. Hodges has been honored by the American Association of School
Librarians and the Girl Scouts of America for her literacy advocacy.
Preston, a Clemson native, is a 2007 graduate of the university.
Inspired by the Children, Libraries and Literacy Initiative, Preston
created Cocky’s Reading Express when he was student president.
The express enlisted student leaders to visit elementary schools
and libraries throughout the state to read and provide books to
young children.
Cocky’s Reading Express continues to roll-along,
planning stops this fall along the I-95 corridor.
Barron,
who retired as director of the School of Library and Information
Science in 2006, was the driving force behind the Children, Libraries
and Literacy Initiative. He helped craft the initiative’s
three-prong mission of research, resources and outreach.
Key components
of the Initiative include the Augusta Baker Chair in Childhood
Literacy, the first chair at the university named for an African-American
woman; the Center for Children’s Books and Literature and
its many resources available to the education community and public;
and outreach efforts that include a statewide network of literacy
groups called Literacy Stars and Cocky’s Reading Express.
View more photos of the event> |