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Reading aloud can be scary. Therapy dogs are here to help at Myrtle Beach, SC library

Boy reading to therapy dog at Chapin Memorial Library in Myrtle Beach as part of the Paws for Reading program.
Boy reading to therapy dog at Chapin Memorial Library in Myrtle Beach as part of the Paws for Reading program. Submitted

Learning how to read can be hard and for some and learning how to read out loud can be downright scary.

Chapin Memorial Library in Myrtle Beach has an event every other Thursday during the summer that can help children overcome these literary anxieties.

Paws for Reading is a program where students in grades kindergarten through fifth grade can read a book to a therapy dog.

“We have been inviting the therapy dogs for about five years,” Stacey LoCascio, the youth services librarian, said. “This summer is the golden doodle, [Mr. McDuffie], and there is another dog coming, and that dog is called Ling-Ling.”

LoCascio said that the program is very popular and that their sign-up slots tend to fill up fast. Each child gets to read to the canine for about 15 minutes.

“We think the program is really important because reading aloud in class can cause a lot of anxiety for children, so this is a way for them to practice their reading on an audience that is not gonna laugh or judge, just give snuggles,” LoCascio said.

Questions and registration requests can be directed to ysstaff@chapinlibrary.org, or you can call 843-918-1293.

Bryn Eddy
The Sun News
Bryn covers breaking news pertaining to Horry County in South Carolina for The Sun News. She is graduating from Winthrop University in May 2022 where she studies English and journalism. She has bylines with The Johnsonian and The Sumter Item. Bryn enjoys investigative journalism and local news.
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