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The Reentry Project. Reading Rainbow "Visiting Day"
Reading Rainbow, hosted by LeVar Burton, is a critically-acclaimed award-winning half-hour PBS series that turns children on to books and reading. The series targets 4-8 year olds, and is based on research that identifies these early years as the optimum time for children to learn to read, and to adopt positive reading habits, skills, and attitudes.
A new episode of Reading Rainbow, "Visiting Day," aired on December 15, 2004 and again on January 17, 2005. In this episode, LeVar introduces a family separated by a prison sentence. The viewing audiences join the family for visiting day and find out what life is like for kids when a parent is incarcerated and what it's like for a parent who can't be at home with his family.
Series Goals
  • Entice children to read and explore quality literature
  • Establish familiarity with books
  • Generate excitement for learning
  • Link books and reading to exciting places, people, and events
  • Encourage life-long reading habits
  • Present a diversity of people in a variety of roles - so children who watch the series regularly will see people who look like them
Helping Kids Prepare for School
Having an interest in books, reading, the world, and learning is key to success in school. Reading Rainbow motivates children to read, introduces them to new experiences, teaches respect for others, and helps them develop a positive self-concept. It also reinforces the fundamentals of literacy - comprehension, grasping the main idea, predicting the outcome, comparing and contrasting, extending the story to other experiences, summarizing, sequencing, organizing information, and using descriptive language.
Reading Rainbow's dynamic, fast-paced, magazine-style format features on-location adventures, colorful animation, and hip music videos. Popular personalities, including Bill Cosby, Tyne Daly, and Whoopi Goldberg, narrate the program's feature book, while captivating illustrations appear on-screen. "Kid-on-the-street" interviews allow real kids to sound off about issues, and in every episode kids the age of viewers recommend three additional books to read.
In July 1983 Reading Rainbow premiered as a summer television series with the intent to promote reading during non-school months. By 1990 the series moved to year around broadcast and, presently, each of the 139 episodes air about twice a year. Over the years, Reading Rainbow has expanded its scope of topics and issues while keeping the joy of reading at the center of its message. Some of these episodes explore science and math, while others include social issues such as homelessness, the Vietnam Memorial, music of slavery, and youngsters talking about gangs and their community of Watts.
Reading Rainbow has been recognized with over 150 awards: 18 Emmys (seven for "Outstanding Children's Series"), a prestigious Peabody, eight CINE Golden Eagles, seven Parent's Choice Awards, and three international Prix Jeunesse Awards. In a more personal way, the series' impact is acknowledged by the actions of children. Librarians and booksellers report that books featured on episodes receive enormous requests and quickly become "classics" in kids' personal libraries; and young children often ask for books seen on Reading Rainbow by title and sometimes even by author.

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