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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 9, 2005
CONTACT: Lisa Lacher, (515) 271-3119, lisa.lacher@drake.edu
LOCAL WOMAN FEATURED ON JANE PAULEY SHOW ABOUT ILLITERACY
Karen Walker, a Des Moines resident who learned to read at age 44 with the help
of Drake University's Adult Literacy Center, will be featured on the Jane Pauley
Show on Wednesday, March 16. The program, which airs at 3 p.m. weekdays on WOI-TV
in Des Moines, focuses on the plight of the 90 million adults in the United
States who are functionally illiterate.
A producer for the Jane Pauley Show contacted Walker, now a volunteer tutor
at Drake's Adult Literacy center, after a story about her appeared in Des Moines
Register on Feb. 5. Walker and her husband, David, flew to New York City and
were interviewed by Pauley on Feb. 17 in front of a studio audience in Rockefeller
Center.
"I was nervous but excited at the same time because it was my first time
on TV," Walker said. "It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience. TV is
a good way to get the word out that everybody has the right to learn to read,
whether you're 5 years old or 80, and that there's help out there."
In addition to Walker, the Jane Pauley Show features Curtis Aikens, a well-known
TV chef who learned how to read at age 26 and spent his school years hiding
his problem, along with Donald Chiapetta, who worked for 25 years as executive
vice president of a national food chain but didn't learn to read until he was
40. Walker joins these two men in describing how they hid their literacy problems
for years and how they finally got help.
For Walker, it was her intense desire to improve her literacy skills so she
could help her grandson learn to read as well as a poster offering free tutoring
at the Drake Adult Literacy Center. At the center, she mastered reading skills
through the phonetics-based, multisensory Wilson Reading System. She now devotes
her Tuesday and Thursday evenings to helping others learn to read at the center.
Since 1976, the Drake Adult Literacy Center has offered free tutoring to adults
with such low literacy skills that they cannot complete job applications, figure
out their bills, read medicine instructions correctly or apply for job promotions.
Although the center has 65 volunteer tutors, more are needed to serve the people
on the center's waiting list. Tutors receive training and then meet one-on-one
with a client twice a week at the center, which is housed in Drake's School
of Education at 3206 University Ave.
For more information about the center's services and volunteer opportunities,
contact Anne Murr at (515) 271-3982 or anne.murr@drake.edu.
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