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Posted by: on May 09, 2008 2:18:37 PM
U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings; Wendy Bhagat, senior vice president, First Book; and Heidi Kilgras, editorial director, Random House Children's Books Tuesday announced the availability of free books through the 2008 Summer Reading Initiative. The initiative marks the first stage of a national distribution of over 850,000 free, new Random House children's books to schools, libraries and literacy organizations serving low-income youth across the country.
Posted by: on May 09, 2008 2:17:50 PM
Many of the 950 or so schoolchildren who were bused up the Colorado National monument recently to take part in Junior Ranger Day have had few, if any, opportunities to explore wild places. To them, nature is a little scary, quite foreign, but a very cool novelty. Studies show that American children now spend an average of 30 minutes of unstructured time outdoors weekly but watch as much as three hours of television daily.
Posted by: on May 09, 2008 2:11:53 PM
In this opinion piece, John Merrow of the Wall Street Journal considers the use of student performance as the main measure by which teachers are judged.
Posted by: on May 09, 2008 2:10:09 PM
The halls of BrooksQuinnJones Elementary School in Nacogdoches, Texas were buzzing with excitement Thursday night, as Nacogdoches ISD elementary school students and parents gathered for the third annual "Summer Reading is REaD HOT" Family Literacy Night. The purpose of the event was to encourage parental involvement in dealing with literacy.
Posted by: Administrator on May 08, 2008 2:14:17 PM
And Tango Makes Three, a children's story about a family of penguins with two fathers, was the most "challenged" book in U.S. public schools and libraries for the second straight year, according to the American Library Association.
Posted by: Administrator on May 08, 2008 2:13:28 PM
Aspiring early childhood and elementary school teachers will have to prove they know how to teach reading on a test the State Board of Education has added to Connecticut's teacher certification requirements. The change, which was made Wednesday, comes amid worries about stagnating or declining student reading scores statewide and concerns that not all state teachers know the mechanics of teaching reading.
Posted by: Administrator on May 08, 2008 2:12:05 PM
According to Dr. DiAnn Hunter with St. John's Regional Medical Center, medical professionals have determined that the spoken word develops parts of a child's brain beyond just the linguistic center. It also develops greater cognitive, auditory and visual skills. "We know that interaction enhances development," said Hunter. 'Like clay'
Posted by: Administrator on May 08, 2008 2:09:37 PM
Classified as a school in need of improvement, Gaston Elementary is exploring new ideas to help the school. An Internet search identified another school with similar demographics that was currently using the reading program that Gaston Elementary will adopt next school year. Staff set up a teleconference with White Plains Elementary in North Carolina to learn what has worked in helping children read.
Posted by: on May 07, 2008 2:12:21 PM
A teacher in the Seattle School District is defying federal, state and district regulations by refusing to administer the Washington Assessment of Student Learning test. He believes the test is harmful to students, teachers, schools and families.
Posted by: on May 07, 2008 2:11:46 PM
Children who can identify letters and sounds before kindergarten are 20 times more likely to read basic words by the end of kindergarten than children who don't know their letters or sounds, according to PreK Now, a Washington, D.C. advocacy group. Missouri's Cape Girardeau School District started a preschool program this school year hoping money paid now will contribute to later academic success.
Posted by: on May 07, 2008 2:11:00 PM
Connecticut's neediest school districts are facing cuts in critical programs that help teach children to read because of a looming $20 million falloff in funding under the state's "do-nothing" budget. The Early Reading Success grants, which for the past decade have paid for reading coaches and extra positions to keep class sizes down, were included in planned state spending for 200708 but not for 200809 when the legislature approved a two-year budget plan last year.
Posted by: on May 07, 2008 2:10:17 PM
Students of Cane Run Elementary School in Louisville, Kentucky start learning even before school starts thanks to a literacy program launched last fall. Each morning, about 25 fourth and fifthgraders read with and tutor first and second-graders in the school's library.
Posted by: on May 07, 2008 2:08:56 PM
Every Monday night, a group of California State University, Fullerton volunteers dedicate their time to strengthening the reading skills of underprivileged children at Project Read, a program focusing on promoting literacy among children living in a transitional home. The volunteers work at the Anaheim Interfaith Shelter, a transitional housing project providing assistance to families that are facing homelessness.
Posted by: Administrator on May 06, 2008 2:33:27 PM
Despite its renown as one of the nation's largest Latino-themed bookstores, Librería Martinez, owned by the barber-turned-MacArthur Foundation "genius grant" winner, may be forced to close by year's end. Sales are down 50% from a year ago and bills are piling up. A new landlord, the Orange County High School of the Arts, which wants to use the store for classrooms, has given Martinez a year to find a new location.
Posted by: Administrator on May 06, 2008 2:32:43 PM
Poetry Alive! is a national theater company that brings the dynamic performance of poetry to students from kindergarten through university levels. It also provides in-service for language arts educators to promote literacy for gifted and/or challenged kids who may be resistant to poetry or reading in general.
Posted by: Administrator on May 06, 2008 2:30:26 PM
Reading expert Kathleen Hayes, a former children's librarian and current editor of Highlight Hive Five magazine shares insights into helping emergent readers — children who are just starting to learn to read.
Posted by: Administrator on May 06, 2008 2:29:12 PM
More than 50 local fathers who took the afternoon off work to attend their child's kindergarten class. There they were taught practical math problems by their children, and then shared donuts and lemonade.
Posted by: Administrator on May 06, 2008 2:28:04 PM
In this radio report, teacher Chela Delgado explains that she once hated standardized tests and didn't want to make her students take them. But then she started listening to some of the children's parents. Her commentary reveals how families in under-resourced schools are pursuing what they see as best for their kids.
Posted by: on May 05, 2008 2:11:27 PM
The "Reading First" program aimed at improving elementary school reading, particularly for low-income children, reaches about 1,500,000 students in 5200 schools nationwide, but a new study from the Department of Education found students in the program are not reading any better than those we are not. Two educators debate the merits and pitfalls of the program's intent and execution on the NewsHour from PBS.
Posted by: on May 05, 2008 2:10:43 PM
Children have welcomed the Harry Potter books in recent years like free ice cream in the cafeteria, but the largest survey ever of youthful reading in the United States will reveal today that none of J.K. Rowling's phenomenally popular books has been able to dislodge the works of longtime favorites Dr. Seuss, E.B. White, Judy Blume, S.E. Hinton, and Harper Lee as the most read.