Home Mullica Hill News Nonprofit promotes literacy in kids with furry friends

Nonprofit promotes literacy in kids with furry friends

FURever as Friends has been stopping by the Mullica Hill Branch Library to help kids enjoy a judgment-free reading environment since 2012.

Ryan Lawrence, The Sun
Erin Mays, Maura Mays, Ainsley Guinter and Aiden Guinter hang out with rabbits (Juliet and Sebastian) and with Megan Haase and her dog, Maya, at a FURever as Friends night at the Deptford Free Public Library on Oct. 18. (Ryan Lawrence/The Sun).

On every second and fourth Thursday of the month, a Woolwich-based nonprofit heads down Route 322 to the Mullica Hill Branch Library to give kids a non-judgmental way to enjoy reading.

“Sometimes you’ll have a child who’s a soft talker and they’ll be able to talk to the animals,” said Sharon Bedmar, president of the FURever as Friends nonprofit. “We’re trying to induce confidence in the reading and provide a calming environment for them. Sometimes we’ll have a helicopter mom and we’ll encourage her to move away and help them relax.”

The program, which occurs at 6:30 p.m. at the Mullica Hill library, has certified therapy cats, dogs and rabbits available for kids of all ages to sit down, grab a book and read to.

Volunteers with the program want the children to read to the therapy animals and not to the volunteers so they become more comfortable with reading and also the animal itself. Bedmar said the children will be able to “say words wrong and make up new words,” and the therapy animals will still provide them with a comforting environment.

The program gained traction after Gloucester County Freeholder Joe Chila was visiting door-to-door during an election, and was asking people what he could do for them. Bedmar suggested to help her get the program off the ground.

Since 2012, it’s been in all libraries within the Gloucester County Library System and others outside the system.

“Mullica Hill and [Margaret] Heggan are our busiest libraries,” Bedmar said. “Fifteen kids, on average, come in and this time of year, we get a lot of Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts coming in.”

She added that while the program is scheduled for an hour at the Mullica Hill library, she has had instances where the organization has stayed at the library until 8 p.m., sometimes later, because it won’t refuse any kid who wants to read to one of its animals.

Previously, Bedmar saw success in two young girls who had Tourette Syndrome read books “beautifully.”

“I told (the mother) that if she steps back and listens to her daughters, she’d see how they can read,” Bedmar said. “She gave me a big hug and told me how I was correct and that she wouldn’t be a helicopter mom again. It does help the kids read.”

In a separate instance, she saw a girl who had an adversity to dogs who’d “scream like bloody murder every time she saw them.” After several visits, the girl began to warm up to the dogs and soon threw treats to them. Now now she is able to hand treats to them.

“We’re not just there for the reading program, but to help the children,” she said.

Children who have well-behaved pets at home are also encouraged to bring them to the program. Bedmar said it gives the children a chance to see how their pets can help another person. She said approximately 20 to 25 kids and parents volunteer with the organization.

Schedules for FURever as Friends’ appearances at the Mullica Hill library can be found at www.GCLS.org and then selecting “Mullica Hill” in the calendar listing, or www.FureverAsFriends.org. Volunteer opportunities are also available on the organization’s website.

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