Charleston Post &
Courier, July 15, 2003
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NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT: Mary French,
a subject last fall of a P&C High Profile, makes
words her business, too.
For seven years, The Dictionary Project
she invented has provided tens of thousands of dictionaries
to third-graders.
She's
been in The Wall Street Journal. She's been on ABC news
and now she's been honored by the Daughters of the American
Revolution with its National Community Service Award.
French started this project in Mount
Pleasant. She has distributed 680,000 dictionaries to
students in 47 states, the Virgin Islands and Puerto
Rico. That's a lot of dictionaries.
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A hearty
congratulations and tip of the tongue to Ms. French.
For her, here are some...
NEW WORDS: Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary
is GMLC's pick for the hippest dictionary.
The 11th edition, which came out
last month, includes 10,000 new words. And IT'S ABOUT
TIME we assimilated "headbanger," "mosh
pit," "dead presidents," "longneck,"
"oy," "dot-commer," "comb-over,"
"brewski" and "phat".
We also like the additions of "headhunt,"
"NIMBY," "compadre," "Botox,"
"fen-phen," "heart-healthy" and
"Frankenfood." "Bludge," a Down
Under word that means "to goof off" is a good
one.
"Bootylicious" was added
to the dictionary in 2002, thanks to Destiny's Child.
But it's so last year, as are "treehugger,"
"roadrage" and "hottie."
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Mary French looks over dictionaries with South Carolina third-graders.

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News & Trends
A Dictionary for every child
Mary French believes that if you give the
power of words to students, their minds will soar. Learning
new words “makes children feel enlightened,” says
French. “They crave words.”
The South Carolina mom is trying to satisfy
that craving and to empower third-grade students through The
Dictionary Project, a nonprofit organization that gives free
dictionaries to third-graders in South Carolina. In the six
years French has been running the project out of her Charleston,
South Carolina, home, she has distributed more than 350,000
dictionaries. Her goal has been to reach every third-grader
in South Carolina, every year. Why third grade? French believes
that it’s the make-or-break year for children’s
literacy.
A dictionary must include the words “courteous”
and “respect” for French to consider giving it
away. About half the dictionaries she’s looked at don’t.
She prefers Webster’s Classic Research Library dictionaries.
French spends 60 hours a week raising funds
to buy new dictionaries. In the past nine months, she has
received so much publicity in the national press that she
has expanded her project to 42 states. Her goal has grown:
she now hopes to reach every third grader in the U.S. What’s
the best part of the work? Says French: “We are putting
words in the hands of children.”
Copyright 2003 by Scholastic, Inc. Used by
permission
By Brenda Rindge
Charleston Post & Courier staff
Give a child a dictionary and he'll start
looking up words.Chances are, the first thing he'll check
out will be expletives, but at least he'll be using the dictionary."A
boy wrote to me one time, 'From your dictionary, I learned
that "ass" is an animal,' " says Mary French,
director of The Dictionary Project. Now French has written
her own dictionary.
Known as the Dictionary Lady, French has
been responsible for the distribution of 90,000 dictionaries
to South Carolina's third-graders since 1995. Nationally,
nearly three-quarters of a million dictionaries are in the
hands of youngsters as a result of the nonprofit project she
runs out of her Mount Pleasant home.
Last year, French started writing a dictionary
that gives sample sentences for each word, and the project
has taken a long time. "It's hard to edit because there
are so many words and so many different contexts," she
says. "And formatting has been my biggest problem."
Then she learned that McGraw-Hill planned to stop publishing
her most popular dictionary. Many publishers, she has found,
don't want to spend money on updating and reformatting dictionaries.
She took matters into her own hands and published one herself.
"We had six weeks to pull together the dictionary,"
she says. "I'm kind of surprised that we did it."
Called "A Student's Dictionary," it includes nearly
13,000 words from "a" to "zygote." It
has information on weights and measures, planets, presidents,
a copy of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution
and amendments and maps of the world and the states. "It's
hard to find things that are not copyrighted," French
says. "We used the CIA (World) Factbook for a lot of
information because federal documents don't have copyrights."
Dictionaries — all dictionaries —
are ongoing projects as new words come into common usage each
year. "I'm in the process of rewriting it and adding
all the new words that I've heard about since July,"
she says. That will include a definition of 'bit' as a mouthpiece
for a horse, which was suggested by her daughter's friend.
"That's how we create this, from children's input,"
she says. "A boy wrote once and said we should include
information about the planets, so that's in there now."
Last year, she handed out a draft of her
work-in-progress dictionary in the western portion of the
state. "We got a lot of feedback from the children,"
she says. "We wanted to know what words they were looking
up. You have no idea how interesting that is. We added some
of the words they suggested. "'Puppy' is one word we
added. We had 'cub' and 'kitten' and 'chick' and other baby
animals. It really should have been in there, but it was something
we overlooked. A little boy wrote a letter and his reason
was, 'I like dogs, but I like puppies more.' "'Ersatz'
is another addition suggested by a student."I had never
heard it and at first I thought it was a word from Pokemon
or something," says French, the mother of a 9-year-old
son and 11-year-old daughter. "Another word we added
was 'communion.' That was suggested by my son's friend."
The way The Dictionary Project works is
that French gets businesses and service organizations to donate
the money to buy the books. Often, they put their organization's
label in them. Many times, the donors distribute the books
themselves, but French also pays a lot of visits to elementary
schools. Many of the sponsors like the dictionary because
it includes the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution
and amendments, she says. "We started adding the stuff
in the back because the children would read it on field trips,"
French says. "It gives them something to read that's
not mandatory, and you can read it in five minutes and you've
learned something." No matter how they are using the
dictionaries, at least they are using them, she says. "It's
always been my philosophy that children at that age are building
their frame of reference and need words to be able to do that,"
she says. "It gives them a better understanding of the
world they live in and the different components of it that
influence our lives."
Charleston Post &
Courier, 10/24/2000
Each year, Mary French teaches students
across the state a lesson in both the English language and
gracious gift-giving. She travels to more than 100 schools
and delivers dictionaries to every third-grade student. For
the 500 elementary and intermediate schools that French can't
get to, she finds someone who can. She also finds a way to
pay for the books through grants, donations from businesses
and money raised by civic groups. Some call her "Dictionary
Lady". She really is a kind of academic Santa Claus.
On a recent fall morning, French paid
a visit to students at Berkeley County's Bonner Elementary
School. She came bearing several boxes of dictionaries - handpicked
to fit the needs of young students learning to read and write.
French searches for books which have large print, cost under
a dollar, are small enough for growing hands and contain most
words that a third-grader uses.
"Every year she does something extremely
special for the kids at Bonner Elementary School," Principal
Melvin Rose said. Some students greeted French with energy
or timid hugs. Others fought drowsy eyes while they traced
small fingers through a book's new pages. "You are the
first person to touch this dictionary," French said as
she asked them to look up a word.
French's dictionaries do not come without
a cost - she has a few requirements for the students who receive
them. The children must write their name in the book to prevent
loss. They must put a mark next to words they look up to track
their growing vocabulary. They must write a thank-you note
to the business or organization that paid for the book. The
thank-you note is important because it keeps dictionaries
coming for the next class of students, French said. "It
is so important to express gratitude to people who are working
to improve your quality of life. These are not hard things
to do," she said. The free dictionaries also change the
way students look at the people in their community, French
said. "They see people around them supporting their education."
French often tells children about her
own poor spelling past. When she learned to spell in grade
school, no one ever corrected her mistakes. But when she enrolled
in Charleston Southern University, her professors demanded
perfection, and she began to see her papers returned with
red circles around misspelled words. "It didn't even
occur to me that I was a bad speller until so many people
commented on it," she said. "I was lazy and didn't
like to look up words."
Since that time, French has been passionate
about giving children the tools to succeed in school. She
also believes spelling is a key to higher test scores. "The
children of this state deserve the very best teachers and
resources. If we set our sights on anything less, we will
be disappointed with the results," she said.
French got the idea for the Dictionary
Project from a 1995 letter to the editor printed in The Post
and Courier. The letter described the need for dictionaries
in Charleston County. The project is modeled after a similar
program in Savannah. Third grade is the focus because it is
the year students begin to work independently, French said.
They begin to write, read for pleasure and think creatively.
At this stage, a dictionary becomes the first and most useful
reference tool a child can own, she said.
Others agree. "Third grade is your
target year, especially for boys. They are at their turning
point ... They are no longer small children," Rose said.
"A book is the ideal gift. People give kids so many things,
but we never give them books."
Not all schools welcomed French, especially
in the beginning. Some principals didn't return phone calls.
Others did not want gifts from strangers. It often caused
her frustration, and she turned to local leaders for help.
"It is typical of schools that are not making the best
use of their resources," she said. "The successful
schools use everything to its fullest capacity. They have
good leadership and seek good teachers. They acknowledge volunteers
and gifts. A good principal lets everyone know you are coming.
He meets you at the door."
French started by raising money for dictionaries
in Dorchester, Berkeley and Charleston county schools. It
was not until the project began to extend beyond the tri-county
area that it grew beyond French's grasp. She ordered 2,000
dictionaries for children in a nearby school district, but
when the books were delivered, a double order was shipped
by mistake. From that error on, the project grew quickly.
French realized early that she could not
succeed alone. She drafted the help of businesses, banks and
civic groups. Some companies donated large sums; others gave
small amounts. It all added up in the end - almost 60,000
dictionaries were delivered in 1999.
"When it first started, it was something
that was manageable. I knew that for it to get bigger, other
people needed to get involved. It needed to grow beyond me,"
French said. French called it the "angel factor"
- a good project eventually will become larger than its originator
because it will take the work of many.
The project also gave French a insider's
view of public education. She has seen firsthand programs
that work in schools and those that don't. She has met the
kinds of leaders who push progress and those who impede it.
French works full time. She writes grant
applications, solicits money for the nonprofit organization
and delivers dictionaries to the schools throughout the year.
The project's goal is to serve all of the state's third-graders
each year. Last year, the project met that goal for the first
time. The work pays off in the end, according to French.
In a recent morning at Bonner Elementary,
third-grader Blake Headden wrote an essay about a ghost. He
used his new dictionary to check the long or confusing words
in his story. He finished by drawing a small lopsided ghost
on the bottom of his paper. His neighbor, a small girl with
braids in her hair, hugged her dictionary to her chest. I
like this book," she said.
For more information about the Dictionary
Project, e-mail: wordpower@dictionaryproject.org
Heather Hare
Charleston Post & Courier
Mary French expanded her Dictionary Project
this year with a lot of help from her friends - local Rotary
clubs in the state. French began the effort in this area five
years ago after reading a letter to the editor in The Post
and Courier from Bonnie Beeferman on Hilton Head. The letter
was a call to the Charleston area to start something such
as the Dictionary Project in the area.
The Dictionary Project provides dictionaries
to third-graders every year. At third grade, students begin
working independently and should be able to use a dictionary,
French said. "All children need to be able to spell,"
French said. "It's not good enough to be able to write.
We have to elevate our expectations for children."
When French read the letter she lived in
Summerville, not Charleston, but thought the idea a good one.
She set to work trying to get money to fund dictionaries for
each third-grader in her county. After a failed attempt at
bake sales, she wrote to every business she could find in
the area, asking for their help. Only one wrote back: Publix.
Publix told her they wanted to give her
$1,200 to buy dictionaries, but she needed nonprofit status.
Through friends at Trident Literacy, an organization for which
she was a volunteer, she was able to use their nonprofit status
to get the money. With the help of the Rotary clubs in the
eastern district of South Carolina, French has supplied schools
in that area of the state with dictionaries. That totals 85,000
dictionaries.
Many different companies and organizations
have helped buy and distribute the dictionaries since French
began the project. The Community Foundation Open Grants Program,
the Beaufort Fund of the Community Foundation, Publix Supermarkets
Charities, Poindexter Insurance Agency, Santee Cooper, the
St. Andrews Rotary Club, the Junior League of Charleston,
Cummins Engine and the Charleston Chapter of the Links Inc.
have all contributed to the effort.
(For a more current list, please
click here.)
French says she hopes exposure to dictionaries
will help begin a climb in test scores. The students write
thank-you notes after receiving their dictionaries. "(Each
child) had a really different reason why they needed a dictionary,"
French said. (To read letters from the children, please click
here.)
Heather Hare covers education issues for
The Post and Courier. She can be reached at 843-937-5546.
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