Creative Ways School Districts Are Promoting Summer Learning

February 2nd, 2026

School districts all over the country are coming up with some really creative ways to keep children reading and learning all summer long in order to help prevent the summer slide.

For the first time ever, Grand Forks Public Schools in North Dakota is bringing the library to its students this summer on the Little Red Reading Bus. In alignment with its RED (Read Every Day) program, this little bus is bringing books to scheduled stops throughout the summer months to help increase reading achievement and to promote a lifelong love of reading.

Zeeland Public Schools in Michigan also runs a reading bus during the summer called the Zee Bus. In addition, students can also go to one of the district’s “Just Right Libraries” on Wednesdays from 4:30-6:00PM to check out books. All of this is part of their action-packed “Summer Stretch” program. Students can download a brochure, filled with resources as well as activities and tools, that they can bring with them to the Zee Bus, Just Right Library or Zeelmania, a local healthy-living street fair, to participate in the fun.

In North Carolina, Rowan-Salisbury Schools has partnered with the Rowan Public Library for the first time this summer to nourish students’ bodies and brains. The Rowan-Salisbury School System provides breakfast and lunch to students in local programs via food trucks while the library’s bookmobile follows, providing books for checking out and allowing students to participate in library programs. The school system also participates in the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction’s “Give Five – Read Five” program that allows students to take home five books, donated by the community, at the end of the school year to encourage summer reading.

Several schools are also using GrapeSEED as part of their summer program. For example, School City of Hammond in Indiana is using GrapeSEED as part of the ‘Summer Bootcamp’ for its Language Development Program students and parents.

GrapeSEED’s songs, chants, poems, big books and action activities keep the students moving forward with their language and literacy development over the summer so they are prepared for the coming school year. Plus, the children have so much fun with GrapeSEED, they don’t even know they are learning!

Congratulations to these and all of the school districts that have worked so hard to keep their students on track for reading and learning success! Keep up the fantastic work!

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The new year is a perfect time for reflection and renewal—not just for us, but for our students, too. After a long winter break, January offers a natural opportunity to revisit and reinforce classroom routines and procedures, especially in multilingual classrooms where clarity and consistency are key to helping all students feel secure and successful. For multilingual learners, routines are more than just classroom management—they provide language-rich structures that support understanding, reduce anxiety, and foster confidence. Whether students are newcomers or have been learning English for years, a clear and predictable environment helps them focus on learning rather than guessing what’s expected. Start the month by gently reviewing procedures: entering the classroom, transitioning between activities, participating in group work, asking for help, and using classroom materials. Model each step and invite students to demonstrate, using visuals, gestures, and multilingual supports when possible. Pair verbal directions with pictures or sentence stems to help students connect words with actions. This not only aids comprehension, it builds community and shared responsibility. Remember, reviewing routines isn’t about enforcing rules—it’s about resetting the tone for a peaceful, productive, and joyful classroom. Make space for students to share what helps them learn best and celebrate the positive habits they already bring with them. By investing time in January to revisit expectations with warmth and intention, you're setting the stage for a second half of the school year filled with growth, laughter, and learning—for every student, in every language.
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