n LOUDOUN
VOL. 9, NO. 39
4 | n EDUCATION
10 | n PUBLIC SAFETY
19 | n PUBLIC NOTICES
Community-Supported News. Free to all.
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AUGUST 8, 2024
Meadowland Students Pilot Reading Camp with Teachers BY ALEXIS GUSTIN
agustin@loudounnow.org
Hanna Pampaloni/Loudoun Now
Leesburg police officers play cornhole with children at the Douglass Community Center and Loudoun sheriff’s deputies let children pet K9s at One Loudoun on Tuesday evening as part of National Night Out.
Community Building: National Night Out BY HANNA PAMPALONI hpampaloni@loudounnow.org
Families from all over Loudoun came out Tuesday night to barbecue, play games and eat ice cream with their local police officers. Communities in western Loudoun including Lovettsville, Purcellville and Middleburg, and eastern Loudoun at One Loudoun, South Riding, Sterling and Ashburn held events to
promote partnerships and personal relationships between the county’s first responders and the residents they serve. At One Loudoun, Sheriff Mike Chapman and Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares spoke with parents while their children were treated to free shaved ice and hugged department K9s. In Leesburg, some officers climbed the Douglass Community Center playground tower and raced down slides, while others played cornhole and showed off the department’s drone. n
Thirty Meadowland Elementary students in first through fifth grades piloted a summer camp that focused on helping them improve their reading skills. Camp Read-A-Lot is a partnership with Shenandoah University and local school divisions and was created to help students improve their reading skills by using phonetics, word recognition, rhyming and writing skills. The camp usually is run by teachers attending Shenandoah University to get their master’s degree or its program for Reading Specialist certification. The camp has been held in the past in partnership with school divisions in Prince William County, Winchester, Warren County and Shenandoah County. This is the first time it has been held in Loudoun. Meadowland Principal Anna Purdy said priority was given to students who qualified for summer school as well as students who were identified as being likely to benefit from additional and more focused instruction. “From there we looked at students who needed additional reading support as well as historically underachieving groups due to lack of opportunity,” Purdy said. They were taught by 19 teachers, most of them long-time Loudoun teachers who
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