What I am passionate about

Fact Sheet
Linking police recruits with elementary school students
In an effort to build relationships between the community and the police department and to improve reading and language skills in elementary school students, recruits attending the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department Academy spend one hour every other week reading and writing with students in several elementary schools in the St. Louis Public Schools. It is hoped that this will be a model that can be applied nationally by other police departments.
From March 3 to June 2, 2010, Books and Badges will be at Dewey, Shenandoah, Woerner and Woodward Elementary Schools. Another class of recruits is currently at Mullanphy, Oak Hill, and Sigel Elementary Schools. Each school has low test scores, a principal willing to participate in the program and students who are reading below grade level. Books and Badges started in November 2002. Since its inception, the following SLPS elementary schools participated in Books and Badges: Adams, Clay, Cote Brilliante, Dewey, Hodgen, Lyon, Meramec, Mullanphy, Oak Hill, Scruggs, Shenandoah, Sigel, and Woodward.
Each Academy class of 25-40 recruits is divided into equal groups recruits. Each group visits a school every week, going to the same school and working with the same student for the duration of their time in the Academy. Every Wednesday afternoon, recruits spend one hour reading, writing and listening to their students. Before the first visit, the recruits are given training on how to read and write with students to help them be successful and effective reading partners.
A study by Saint Louis University in 2006 determined that Books and Badges provides a valuable service for both the schools it serves and for the recruits. The principals were overwhelmingly positive about the program and the benefits it brings to their schools. The recruits, in general, rated the program highly and saw similar benefits as the principals through the development of positive relationships with students and learning to form relationships with young people. Evaluation questionnaires given to recruits since the 2006 study continue to support Books and Badges as an effective program. Most of the recruits either agreed or strongly agreed that the students enjoyed reading and writing with them and that Books and Badges had improved police and youth relationships, given them a better understanding of young people in the community and contributed to a better relationship between law enforcement and the schools. As one recruit stated, Books and Badges "opened my eyes to the young as well as the schools that I will be involved with in the future."