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Maybe it’s because she doesn’t have a TV, but Joyce Justice loves
reading and wants to share her passion with the community.
Justice recently completed training to be a volunteer reading
tutor for the Newport Beach Public Library’s literacy services
program.
“It’s something that I’ve been wanting to do for a long time,” she
said. “I worked in the food industry for 10 years, and I was totally
amazed in this day and age how many people could not read and what a
stumbling block it was for them.”
For the first time in many years, Justice is not working and has
the free time to be a volunteer, she said. A native of Newport Beach,
Justice moved to Washington, D.C. with her husband, Jim, for a few
years, but they came back in 1977. She’s worked as a high school
history teacher and as an editor for the American Historical Assn.
The library’s literacy program matches adults who want to improve
their reading skills with trained volunteer tutors who help them. The
library’s literacy services coordinator, Diane Moseley, said the
program has about 80 to 100 active volunteers at any given time.
Justice got involved after she noticed a banner at the library
about literacy services.
Somewhat serendipitously, that afternoon she ran into a friend who
was already a volunteer and the two talked about the program.
“I immediately called that day and they had their first meeting
that night,” Justice said. “It was kind of like it was meant to be.”
Justice is a voracious reader of newspapers and history books, and
she said she even reads her husband’s technical journals on astronomy
and physics.
“I’ll read anything,” she said. “It’s very rare that I don’t have
a book in my purse.”
Literacy is important for many reasons, including simple safety
issues such as being able to read a stop sign or a bottle of
medication, Justice said.
It can be very difficult for adults to admit they need help
reading, so tutors who want to help them need to be sensitive to
that, she said.
“Maybe the most important challenge is to understand that you’re
dealing with adults,” she said. “...You’re dealing with trying to
encourage confidence and self-esteem and pride in their learning.”
Justice said she can’t wait to get started tutoring so she can
share the joy of reading.
“There’s just a whole world, to me, that is opened up by the
written word,” Justice said.
She added, laughing, “That’s probably because I don’t have a TV in
my house.”
Anyone interested in becoming a literacy tutor can attend one of
two orientation sessions to be held Jan. 13 at 6:30 p.m. and Jan. 16
at 10 a.m. Both sessions will be at the Newport Beach Public Library,
1000 Avocado Ave. For information call (949) 717-3874.
-- Alicia Robinson
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