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Choose A Book And Read To Your Barber, He'll Take A Little Money Off The Top

Jozef Jason, 7, reads a book to Ryan Griffin at the Fuller Cut in Ypsilanti, Mich., as part of the barbershop's literacy program.
Keith Jason
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Courtesy of Keith Jason
Jozef Jason, 7, reads a book to Ryan Griffin at the Fuller Cut in Ypsilanti, Mich., as part of the barbershop's literacy program.

Jozef Jason came to the Fuller Cut barbershop for one reason: the kid's mohawk. It's almost second-grade picture day, and he wants to look good. He hops up onto an antique swivel chair and asks his barber for the new 'do.

"It's high on the top and short on the bottom, and lines that go in a diagonal line where the top is gonna be," explains the 7-year-old.

Jozef came for the mohawk, but his dad, Keith Jason, chose this barbershop over all the others in Ypsilanti — a working-class town just outside Ann Arbor, Mich. — for a different reason. At the Fuller Cut, kids get a $2 discount if they read a book aloud to their barber.

You know, maybe someday some kid will grow up and be a journalist, be a writer, and he'll say, 'You know what, when I was young, my barber used to make me read.' "

"It's an amazing thing," Jason says. "It's helping my pockets, it's helping their education, and it's helping prepare a better future for them, so I love it."

This program made its way to Ypsilanti because of Ryan Griffin, who has been cutting mohawks, fades and tapers here for 20 years. He says he first read about a similar literacy program in Harlem, N.Y., so he asked his boss if they could replicate it. Within a few weeks, people in the area were donating books to the cause.

"We get complimented by teachers that will say it does so much for these kids throughout the school year," he says.

You can find similar programs all over the country, from Houston, to Dubuque, Iowa, to Columbus, Ohio.

But here at the Fuller Cut, it's not just enough to read the book out loud. Kids, Griffin explains, get quizzed by their barber to make sure they understand what they read.

Joziah and Jozef read to their barbers at the Fuller Cut in Ypsilanti, Mich. As part of the barbershop's literacy program, children get $2 off their cut for reading a book to their barber.
Keith Jason / Courtesy of Keith Jason
/
Courtesy of Keith Jason
Joziah and Jozef read to their barbers at the Fuller Cut in Ypsilanti, Mich. As part of the barbershop's literacy program, children get $2 off their cut for reading a book to their barber.

"Any help these kids can get with reading and ... comprehension is a big thing. You know, maybe someday some kid will grow up and be a journalist, be a writer, and he'll say, 'You know what, when I was young, my barber used to make me read.' "

Jozef picks We're Going on a Lion Hunt from a stack of books piled on top of two green tables in the waiting room.

"We're going on a lion hunt," he reads. "We're going to catch a big one. We're not scared, been there before."

Meanwhile, Keith Jason encourages his younger son, Joziah, to pick a book while they wait for his turn.

"Hey, Bud, pick out a book that's gonna challenge you, nothing too easy. All right?"

A lot of young black boys come to the Fuller Cut to get a trim, and the shop tries to reflect that in its book selection. Books about black baseball players and black kid detectives make up a lot of the titles.

More than a hundred kids have read to the Ypsilanti barbers over the past year. Some more willingly than others.

Georgio Pitts, 9, is going into fifth grade this year. He doesn't seem super enthusiastic about reading. His dad says Georgio would rather play video games, but he makes his son grab a book all the same. His pick? Home Run Kings.

He may not love the reading part, but the part where he gets $2 from the barber to put in his piggy bank? That part is pretty great.

Copyright 2016 Michigan Radio

Jennifer is a reporter for Michigan Radio's State of Opportunity project, which looks at kids from low-income families and what it takes to get them ahead. She previously covered arts and culture for the station, and was one of the lead reporters on the award-winning education series Rebuilding Detroit Schools. Prior to working at Michigan Radio, Jennifer lived in New York where she was a producer at WFUV, an NPR station in the Bronx.