Stirring kids’ imaginations in Charlotte County
By PCH Editor Laura A. Schmid
Shawn Smith is on a mission to get children to read.
The soft-spoken, Southern-drawling Tennessee native was shocked when
he arrived in Port Charlotte and found out that
Dolly Parton’s popular Imagination Library, which was started in his
home state in 1996, does not have a chapter in
Charlotte County.
So he decided to start it up himself, on top of managing his new
salon, Hair by Shawn and Company Salon and Spa, which
opened in Charlotte Harbor this past year.
I met with Smith recently as he explained the Imagination Library to
me. Make no mistake — Smith is passionate about the
Imagination Library, which he has seen for himself bring positive
results and improved literacy.
“It would put a book in every child’s hands who signs up,” Smith
explained. “It wasn’t something I planned on doing. It
was something I did out of emotion.”
But he needs a partner.
As part of Parton’s “replication” policy, as the “local champion,”
Smith is required to have a 501(c)(3) nonprofit
organization to collaborate with to distribute the book.
Here’s how Imagination Library works: Starting at birth, each
preschool-age child — regardless of family income — is
mailed a “high-quality, age-appropriate” book directly to her or his
own home, according to the website
imaginationlibrary.com. The books are picked carefully by parents,
teachers, librarians, child development specialists
and literacy experts, according to an Imagination Library
brochure.
The child builds her own library and, hopefully, a love of reading.
Starting at such a young age also is designed to
encourage parents to spend time reading to children, which helps to
result in positive association with reading.
“It’s personal to me,” Smith said. “My grandmother a mountain woman,
(who came from a family of sharecroppers) only had
a third-grade education. The Bible was the only book they
read.”
Smith relates to Dolly Parton’s urge to start Imagination Library
because her own father couldn’t read.
Through the course of his career, Smith said he has met many people
who were closet-case illiterates.
“You would be surprised,” said a dismayed Smith.
While Smith has put down the initial 10 percent of the money
required to start the Charlotte County Imagination Library,
he will also have to raise $5,000 every five years to keep the
program. He said this works out to $2.08 a book.
He plans a fundraiser in 2012 to raise funds, but needs to find a
local nonprofit who will help him with getting books
shipped here and distributed.
If you or your nonprofit group are interested in working with Smith,
call him at his salon, 941-625-0060, or email him
at hairstylistshawn@gmail.com.