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Give Schools the Gift of ‘Reading to Learn” with Access to ‘Human-Read’ Audiobooks and Break the Cycle of Reading Failure for More U.S. Students

Categories: Press Releases

The gift of ‘reading to learn’ will support tens of thousands of children and teens in U.S. schools who now struggle to read due to dyslexia or a vision impairment. Your 2017 tax-deductible contribution provides access to more than 80,000 ‘human-read’ audiobooks, K-12 textbooks, literature and popular titles from Learning Ally.


PRINCETON, N.J. (PRWEB) DECEMBER 20, 2017

Each year, tens of thousands of children and teens fail in school, due to reading challenges that make it difficult, if not impossible, to read standard print materials because of a learning disability, like dyslexia or a vision impairment. Research now suggests that one in five students has dyslexia and many will go undiagnosed.

Student Using audiobooks

"Access to Learning Ally’s quality audiobook library built for a school learning environment can make a significant difference in a child’s academic potential."

This holiday season, Learning Ally, an ed-tech nonprofit with 70 years’ experience helping individuals and schools bridge the reading achievement gap, is encouraging Americans to give the gift of ‘reading to learn’ through quality human-read audiobooks in support of the most vulnerable children in U.S. schools – struggling readers.

The Children’s Literacy Foundation also finds that one out of six children who do not read at age level by the end of third grade will not graduate from high school. The lack of reading proficiency is a key reason why an estimated 8000 U.S. students drop out of school each day limiting their financial potential and ability to compete in the workforce.

Learning Ally is a nonprofit organization and relies on donors to make tax-deductible donations of $65, $135 or $270 to support U.S. schools that do not have the funding to provide accessible audiobooks for students with print disabilities. The library offers access to 80,000 human-narrated titles, including K-12 textbooks, literature and popular titles to engage all ages.

Skye Malik, a college student in New York City with dyslexia thrives in her courses today because of access she received to Learning Ally in middle school. “It changed my life,” she says. “This reading accommodation was the single most important resource in my class!”

"Access to Learning Ally’s quality audiobook library built for a school learning environment can make a significant difference in a child’s academic potential,” says Dr. Scott Taylor, Superintendent of the Highland Park School District, NJ.“Often, these students have high intellectual ability, but cannot keep pace with their reading assignments.” Dr. Taylor’s district received a grant this year through a partnership with his NJ Senator, Patrick Diegnan and his Department of Education.

Donors to Learning Ally include U.S. businesses with employee-matched contributions who believe in supporting their local communities and schools and to improve education for all learners; philanthropists concerned with the growing reading crisis in America, and individuals who understand the frustration and anguish a child who is blind or dyslexic experiences in the reading and learning process.

By giving the gift of ‘reading to learn’ with Learning Ally, your generous donations will support more U.S. schools who want to provide learning equality for struggling readers. You will make a lasting impact on a child’s academic achievement now and for a brighter future.

Visit https://learningally.org or call 1-800-221-4792 and select option 4.

Educators can request a demo at 1-800-221-1098 or visit https://learningally.org/educators.