James Patterson’s Latest Plot

James Patterson’s Latest Plot

America’s best-selling author pairs with UF to raise literacy levels in Florida schools
By Larry Lansford
“As a Floridian, I am impressed that (UF has) the expertise, resources and dedication to help underperforming schools transform their literacy cultures.”

James Patterson is America’s best-selling author, but he says the greatest reward from his writing career is having the means to support literacy causes across the nation and, most recently, in his home state of Florida.

At a recent gathering of state education leaders, legislative officials and other supporters in Tallahassee, Patterson joined University of Florida educators in announcing his $3 million contribution to UF’s College of Education and the kickoff of its ambitious literacy initiative aimed at doubling the number of schoolchildren in Florida who can read proficiently.

UF professors steering the effort have dubbed the initiative the James Patterson Literacy Challenge.

“We chose the James Patterson Literacy Challenge name not only to recognize the donor’s generosity, but to acknowledge the challenges faced by struggling readers and their teachers,” said UF education professor Holly Lane, who is heading the literacy acceleration effort. Lane also directs the UF Literacy Initiative at the College of Education.

Patterson, in an interview before the Feb. 26 announcement, sees his writing as a personal mission: “I want to prove to everyone, from children to adults, that there is no such thing as a person who doesn’t like to read, only people who haven’t found the right book.”

Patterson is best known for his many enduring fictional characters and suspense-thriller series like Alex Cross and Women’s Murder Club. His latest books are “All-American Murder: The Rise and Fall of Aaron Hernandez” and “Fifty-Fifty,” the second installment in the Harriet Blue detective series.

Working through his Patterson Family Foundation, the novelist also is well known for his philanthropy supporting higher education, literacy instruction, keeping libraries well stocked, and book-reading by people of all ages. His latest $3 million donation to UF follows on the heels of gifts worth over $400,000 that he has made over the past five years to fund UF scholarships for 21 future teachers with a strong interest in reading instruction.

Patterson, who lives in Palm Beach, said he supports the University of Florida’s literacy acceleration program because “as a Floridian, I am impressed that they have the expertise, resources and dedication to help underperforming schools transform their literacy cultures and help their struggling students learn on grade level.”

Lane said more than 40 percent of Florida’s third graders have been performing below the benchmark passing score for reading on the Florida Standards Assessment.

She said low-performing schools commonly face two major obstacles in their literacy programs: Many children arrive at a school unprepared for the reading expectations of their grade level and many teachers are unprepared to address their needs.

“Our previous experience and studies show that our methods in literacy instruction and intervention work,” she said. “Our goal in the Patterson Challenge is to have double the number of students in our participating schools achieve passing scores in reading within two years.”

According to Monday’s announcement, the Patterson-funded literacy project will be launched first in two Florida school districts—one in UF’s campus locale of Alachua County and a second district yet to be announced.

“We will work intensively with the faculties of the selected schools to change their literacy cultures,” Lane said, “from one where reading failure is routine and often accepted as inevitable to one where failure is simply not an option.”

She said the UF approach involves powerful professional learning activities and coaching for teachers. A core feature is a web-based professional development resource to help teachers learn effective methods for assessment, instruction and intervention in foundational literacy skills.

The online resource will be hosted on a comprehensive web platform being developed by the college’s Lastinger Center for Learning. Participating teachers will be able to upload instructional artifacts and video examples of their teaching for review by a UF literacy coach or sharing with other participating teachers.

“Our vision is to make the online resources accessible to any Florida reading teacher by the end of the year,” Lane said.

Each partnering school district will target up to five underperforming elementary schools. UF faculty researchers and doctoral students will work with each school to assess their current literacy practices and then develop literacy acceleration plans tailored to meet their needs.

The college will provide a UF-trained master teacher for each district to provide coaching and ongoing professional development, said Lane. The master teachers also will lead summer workshop academies for the participating educators.

Lane said plans call for expanding the literacy initiative to additional Florida school districts during year 2 of the project.

“Through the James Patterson Literacy Challenge at UF, we envision that schoolchildren across Florida and beyond will be guided by teachers who know how to maximize literacy growth and foster the love of reading in children that can influence every aspect of their lives moving forward,” Lane said.

The best is yet to come

Go Greater was a determination, embraced across campus. To continue that pursuit, the university looks to caring philanthropists — the people who feed ingenuity and exploration and create doers and bring ideas to life, imagination to fruition, promise to fulfilment and potential to exceptional. It’s those partnerships with far-sighted leaders that will make UF even more spectacular and enable the university to touch the lives of Earth’s 7 billion people.

So we can all Go Greater, together.

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