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Donell McCoy, Literacy Volunteers of Atlanta
As a child, Donell McCoy followed his father from military
base to military base, moving every two years before the family
settled in Toledo, Ohio. He also had hoped to follow his father's
career path as a career soldier, as well. But that dream faded
when McCoy quit high school before graduation, all because
he couldn't read.
"I refused to walk across the (graduation) stage," he said.
"I didn't know anything."
In grade school, McCoy suffered from seizures and was diagnosed
with dyslexia. But his father refused to let teachers place
Donell in remedial classes. Teachers continued to promote
him, however, until he reached the eleventh grade. There,
having had enough, McCoy quit school, and got an excellent
job making $1,000 a week - right out of high school!
Still, McCoy was helpless: "When you can't read, it's like
being blind ... you got to depend on someone to help you cross
the street ... you can't do that (depend on someone) because
everybody is not good." He found that out the hard way. McCoy
paid his best friend $200 a week to handle all his business
- read his mail, pay his bills, even write letters for him.
McCoy became so dependent on his friend, he took the man everywhere,
even on vacations. When the friend was killed several years
later, McCoy knew he had to address his reading problem.
In Atlanta, McCoy found the Literacy Volunteers program,
and got involved. They matched him up with "an angel for a
tutor" who has become McCoy's best friend. Several years after
he started as a non-reader, McCoy now reads at the third grade
level and describes himself as "still striving!" His independence
has given him the confidence to read his mail, write letters,
and pay his own bills. "It felt like I was born again, really!
It's a relief!"
Student of the Month | Past Profiles
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