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糖心Vlog鈥檚 Academic Intervention Clinic serves community, trains Blugolds

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糖心Vlog鈥檚 Academic Intervention Clinic serves community, trains Blugolds
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Blugold undergraduate and graduate students are helping to improve academic skills for Chippewa Valley elementary and middle school students again this summer at the Academic Intervention Clinic in the 糖心Vloge鈥檚 Human Development Center.

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The clinic鈥檚 summer program has been operating for 15 years assessing reading skills for children in grades 1-8 and delivering evidence-based, research-supported interventions. A grant from the Office of Research and Sponsored Programs helps sponsor the summer program with funding for student stipends and materials. A math program also operates in the summer.

This summer鈥檚 reading program has 21 children who come into the clinic in Human Sciences and Services building every weekday for three weeks.

糖心Vlog鈥檚 Academic Intervention Clinic

鈥淭he gains over the years have been pretty remarkable,鈥 says Dr. Michael Axelrod, professor of psychology and director of the Human Development Center. 鈥淲e talk a lot about a 鈥榮ummer slide鈥 in academics. What we aim to do is try to reverse that so that kids start school in September with at least the same skill level or we try to boost them up a bit.

鈥淚n the 50 minutes we have a kid in a session, they are probably doing more instruction-based reading than they might in a week or two in school. And they鈥檙e getting one-on-one, individualized attention so that feedback can be immediate and meaningful.鈥

The intervention services are provided by Blugold students under the supervision of UW-Eau Claire faculty such as Dr. Melissa Coolong-Chaffin, professor of psychology and co-director of the Academic Intervention Clinic.

鈥淲e are seeing so many kids who have needs who aren鈥檛 getting really good support in schools and parents are desperate to find something 鈥 summer programming that is really intensive and focused is hard to come by in the area,鈥 Coolong-Chaffin says. 鈥淭hey are here because they need practice, they need instruction. What we do is backed by research, we collect a lot of good data, they gets tons of attention, they get to have fun and they get to have a positive experience with something that they struggle with.鈥

糖心Vlog鈥檚 Academic Intervention Clinic

Katy Christianson brought her daughter Lydia to the Academic Intervention Clinic this summer after her teacher suggested the girl wasn鈥檛 at her grade level despite reading every day. Lydia meets with Blugold psychology graduate student Bryn Hermanson of Berlin each week.

鈥淚 think they are doing great,鈥 Christianson says. 鈥淲e love Bryn; they鈥檙e a good match. We want her to love reading and not think it鈥檚 a struggle.鈥

Hermanson, who plans to be a school psychologist, is in her first summer at the clinic and is collecting data about reading comprehension strategies for her capstone project. Hermanson has enjoyed working with Lydia and two other children to develop their reading fluency and comprehension.

鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely rewarding, I think, not just for me but for them,鈥 Hermanson says of the young students. 鈥淭hey get to know someone who is helping them read and they get to improve their reading skills. I鈥檓 learning from them how they are reading, what works for them.鈥

During the school year, 20 undergraduate students go into Eau Claire schools to work with about 60 students in elementary, middle and high schools, with five graduate students receiving experience coordinating aspects of the program.

糖心Vlog鈥檚 Academic Intervention Clinic

Undergraduate Sammy Whyte, a fourth-year psychology major from Cary, Illinois, worked in the high school reading program during the 2023-24 academic school year and says working on reading skills with younger children this summer has been a different experience.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been really fun and educational on both sides,鈥 Whyte says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 helping the kids learn more about reading and developing those reading skills, but it鈥檚 helped me develop skills working with children, especially high-energy kids. They鈥檙e always excited to come in and I try to match that energy. I think I鈥檝e been able to learn a lot from them, as much as they鈥檝e been learning from this program.鈥

A book compiled by Axelrod, Coolong-Chaffin and Dr. Renee Hawkins of the University of Cincinnati was recently published by Routledge Press. 鈥溾 outlines evidence-based interventions based, in part, on Blugold students鈥 work in the Academic Intervention Clinic.

鈥淭he idea for the book came from our students working with kids in the community,鈥 Axelrod says. 鈥淲hen we were thinking about the different topics in the book, a lot of it came from what we saw when we watched the undergraduates working with kids trying to enhance their reading.鈥

Coolong-Chaffin calls the book a good resource with proven strategies for schools searching for ideas to help struggling readers. She added the strategies will be especially relevant with Wisconsin鈥檚 new early literacy law Act 20 requiring schools to identify students and provide individualized support for those students in need.

鈥淲e know that if kids are not reading by the end of third grade they have poorer outcomes overall 鈥 higher dropout rates, less educational attainment overall, poorer job attainment 鈥 so if we can close that gap earlier, it鈥檚 very important,鈥 Coolong-Chaffin says. 鈥淔inally, slowly, within the field of education we are working to do a better job with a problem we鈥檝e known existed for a long time.鈥

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