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Today’s Literacy Headlines

Each weekday, Reading Rockets gathers interesting news headlines about reading and early education.

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To help migrant students, Westminster created a summer program for English language learners (opens in a new window)

Chalkbeat Colorado

July 03, 2024

Westminster Public Schools was one of many districts in Colorado to receive a surge of new immigrant students after the start of the school year. With that help, Westminster budgeted $10,000 to create a new summer school program to help Spanish-speaking students keep practicing English, particularly hoping to enroll many of the new immigrant students who had just started to learn.

 

Hoot, Howl and Sneeze: 6 Picture Books for Maximum Read-Aloud Joy (opens in a new window)

The New York Times

July 03, 2024

There are two kinds of story time: the one where listeners’ heads drop sleepily onto your shoulders and the one that feels, refreshingly, like a table read for the theater of the absurd. The former is sweet and cozy. The latter sparks audience participation and requests for an encore. If you’re going for this vibe and in the mood to strut your stuff as a raconteur, start here. From silly rhymes to lively sound effects to stealthily-building suspense, these old standbys and new classics have something for everyone. 

Mister Rogers Showed Me How to Teach Civics (opens in a new window)

Education Week (subscription)

July 02, 2024

Learning about civics can begin in kindergarten with the simple understanding that everyone is part of a community and that every single person, for better or for worse, has a role in shaping that community. The goal of civics education is to equip students with the knowledge, skills, and values necessary to be responsible citizens who contribute positively to their communities and the broader society.

The Benefits of Writing for an Audience (opens in a new window)

Edutopia

July 02, 2024

Knowing their writing has an audience besides their teacher helps motivate students to do their very best work. Students need an authentic audience beyond the school to generate purpose, value, and engagement. Teaching author’s craft skills also becomes more engaging and relevant to students when given a specific audience. The focus provides opportunities for reflecting and experimenting with different writing skills.

Reading Legislation Update (opens in a new window)

Language Magazine

July 02, 2024

Multiple states across the U.S. pass legislation regarding reading instruction. For example, Kansas Governor Laura Kelly signed into law the Kansas Blueprint for Literacy legislation, which would “amend teacher education programs to improve classroom instruction in reading,” adhering to “evidence-based research on phonemic awareness, phonetics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension.” The bipartisan bill would align higher education and K–12 resources to retrain Kansas educators in the science of reading, structured literacy, literacy screening, and assessment tools. 

Schools Got a Record $190 Billion in Pandemic Aid. Did It Work? (opens in a new window)

The New York Times

July 01, 2024

Two new studies suggest that the largest single federal investment in U.S. schools improved student test scores, but only modestly. “The money did contribute to the recovery,” said Thomas J. Kane, an economist at Harvard University, who helped lead one of the studies. “Could the money have had a bigger impact? Yes.” In a country of nearly 50 million public school children, it’s difficult to achieve large results at scale. And even small improvements in test scores can have long-term benefits, increasing students’ future earnings.

Summer slide: What is it? How can parents help prevent it? (opens in a new window)

Wyoming Tribune Eagle

July 01, 2024

While summer provides students a well earned break after the school year, it also brings the chance of them experiencing the summer slide. Summer slide is the name for children’s loss of the skills they learned during the school year. Those skills may lose their sharpness because kids don’t have the consistent exposure or access to rigorous educational opportunities. Sheridan County School District 1 Literacy Coordinator Susie Mohrmann believes there are various ways parents can provide meaningful learning opportunities for their children throughout the summer. “I think that probably the easier thing that sometimes parents don’t think about, and I know I didn’t, is having experiences and using vocabulary with kids is almost as meaningful as reading a book with kids. That importance of building background knowledge at any time of year, experiencing new things and learning new vocabulary is super important,” said Mohrmann.

How music education sharpens the brain, tunes us up for life (opens in a new window)

Ed Source

June 27, 2024

Aficionados of the arts have long argued that art transforms us, but in recent years, neuroscience has shown just how music can shape the architecture of the brain. This cognitive research illuminates the connection between music and learning and gives heft to longstanding arguments for the power of music education that are newly relevant in the wake of California’s Proposition 28, which sets aside money for arts education in schools. 

The English-Learner Student Population, in Charts (opens in a new window)

Education Week (subscription)

June 27, 2024

English learners accounted for 10.6 percent of all public school students in fall 2021, up from 9.4 percent in fall 2011. That’s according to federal data updated in May which tracks this student population’s growth over time and other statistics of note including English learners’ racial/ethnic identities, home languages, and English learners identified as students with disabilities. Data on the percentage of students that were English learners in fall 2021 by state shows how this population of students has grown in parts of the country not historically associated with large numbers of English-learner students.

Boys Are Struggling. Male Kindergarten Teachers Are Here to Help. (opens in a new window)

The New York Times

June 27, 2024

Boys are falling behind in school. They are less likely than girls to be ready for kindergarten. They read at lower levels. They graduate from high school at lower rates. This gender gap in education has significantly widened just in the last generation. One group is uniquely positioned to help put boys on the right track in their first year of formal schooling: men who teach kindergarten. Yet only around 3 percent of kindergarten teachers are men. We interviewed a dozen men with the job about being a rarity in their field. The teachers spoke about drawing on their own experiences as boys in school to address the challenges boys face today.

‘Astonishing’ Absenteeism, Trauma Rates Root of Academic Crisis (opens in a new window)

The 74

June 26, 2024

Nearly 15 million children were chronically absent in the 2021-22 school year, doubling pre-pandemic numbers, and millions have lived through at least one traumatic experience, such as parent death or abuse. The Annie E. Casey Foundation’s 2024 Kids Count Data Book examines the causes driving the “astonishing” rates, resulting in bleak educational outcomes and disproportionately impacting Native, Black and Latino children. 

5 Things Schools Can Do This Summer to Improve Student Attendance Next Year (opens in a new window)

Education Week (subscription)

June 26, 2024

It may seem counterintuitive to focus on student attendance during the summer, but the break can give schools crucial time to connect students at risk of disengaging during the school year. The five recommendations are: review attendance data to target students at risk of absenteeism; reach out to families at home; leverage your summer programs; ensure students return to school healthy; and plan to start your school year off right by building a strong sense of school connectedness among students.

2024 Boston Globe-Horn Book Award Winners Announced (opens in a new window)

School Library Journal

June 26, 2024

The 2024 Boston Globe-Horn Book Awards were announced this week, honoring books in three categories—Picture Book, Fiction, and Nonfiction/Poetry. The Picture Book winner is Do You Remember? by Sydney Smith, the Fiction winner is Remember Us by Jacqueline Woodson, the Nonfiction Award winner is The Mona Lisa Vanishes: A Legendary Painter, a Shocking Heist, and the Birth of a Global Celebrity by Nicholas Day, and the Poetry winner is Kin: Rooted in Hope by Carole Boston Weatherford.

This is your brain. This is your brain on screens (opens in a new window)

Hechinger Report

June 25, 2024

Scientists detect differences in brain activity that could explain why comprehension is better on paper. The advantage for paper is a small one, but it’s been replicated in dozens of laboratory experiments, particularly when students are reading about science or other nonfiction texts.

A Love Letter to Cricket, the Bookish Child’s Bible (opens in a new window)

The New York Times

June 25, 2024

For young magazine readers with literary pretensions, it wasn’t just our best option; it was our only option. Cricket was beautiful. Its logo looked as if it had been painted by a calligraphy brush, moving from elegant but clear lettering into a delicate image of its namesake insect. The cover of the first issue I remember seeing featured a Margot Zemach illustration of a regal tiger reclining on a green bench; the back cover showed the equally regal back of his head. Inside were poems, stories, cartoons; work by Madhur Jaffrey and Hilary Knight — but also by other children, my age and younger.

New study links oral narrative structure with reading skills in young children (opens in a new window)

PsyPost

June 25, 2024

In a recently published study in the journal npj Science of Learning, researchers have discovered a significant relationship between the way children tell stories and their reading abilities. This research found that children who displayed more complex narrative structures in their oral stories tended to perform better on reading tests several months later. This link appears to be independent of the child’s intelligence and understanding of others’ perspectives.

Integrated English Language Development (opens in a new window)

Language Magazine

June 24, 2024

The integrated English language development (ELD) service model guides educators to combine content and language instruction. The model provides inclusive, equitable access to core content while improving linguistic and academic outcomes for emergent multilingual students.

5 Reasons To Keep Up Read-Alouds Beyond Kindergarten (opens in a new window)

KQED Mindshift

June 24, 2024

From bedtime stories to storytime on the classroom rug, read-alouds are a powerful educational tool for students across grade levels. Reading aloud can capture young people’s interest in stories and can help them process their emotions. Over 80% of children aged 6-14 who are read to said they love or like read-aloud time, according to a Scholastic survey. The same report found that despite positive feelings towards read-alouds, the frequency of read-alouds tends to decrease as children get older, peaking at age 5. 

Each Student Has a Different Reading Journey. Many Fall Into These 3 Categories. (opens in a new window)

KQED Mindshift

June 21, 2024

Every fall, I look forward to the challenge of matching our students with books they don’t want to put down. However, even with comfortable seating, ample book access, consistent time, supportive classmates and a knowledgeable teacher offering recommendations, not all students embrace our reading routine right away. Each student is at a different point in their reading journey. While we can all agree that labels suck, in my experience, many (but certainly not all) students fall into one of three reading categories: instant starters, bike riders and smart skeptics.

Kindergartners Are Missing a Lot of School. This District Has a Fix (opens in a new window)

KQED Mindshift

June 19, 2024

In California, for example, more than 1 in 3 kindergartners was chronically absent. But the tiny town of Livingston, in California’s sprawling Central Valley, is an outlier – and a powerful lesson in the ways a district can proactively prevent wide-scale absenteeism. Three key factors: teaching young parents that kindergarten attendance matters; helping parents make sense of pandemic health rules; and making school a place children want to be.

‘Science of Reading’ Learning Walks: 4 Things for Principals to Look For (opens in a new window)

Education Week (subscription)

June 19, 2024

Principals can conduct these a few times per semester, perhaps accompanied by instructional coaches and district literacy specialists. Through learning walks, principals can determine what additional support and resources—like extra professional learning community sessions or training—their educators need. Principals usually spend about 15 to 20 minutes in each class on their learning walks, to check on how teachers are implementing the lesson plan.

A Picture Book Paean to the Golden Age of LPs (opens in a new window)

The New York Times

June 18, 2024

Kids don’t need to know what zydeco is, or that Mandy and the Meerkats are a nod to Diana Ross and the Supremes, to dig this spoof of vintage vinyl: “Animal Albums From A to Z,” by Cece Bell. This elaborately conceived yet winningly goofy picture book comprises 26 album covers — all allegedly vintage — beginning with “Accordion Americana,” by the Tejano musician Arnie Dillow (an armadillo who recorded for the Musica Avocado label), and ending with “Zigzag Zinnia,” by the Zydeco Zebras (on Zucchini Records). 

Who Trains the Trainers in the ‘Science of Reading?’ (opens in a new window)

Education Week (subscription)

June 18, 2024

When a school begins to move its practices closer to the “science of reading,” the large body of knowledge about how kids learn to read, they must manage a number of significant changes. Schedules may need to adjust. Teachers and leaders both need training. Students will need to adjust to new routines. Often, all these parties will also be working with new curricula. Large or small, districts largely follow a three-step plan to roll out a new, science-of-reading-based curriculum: build knowledge, train, and sustain.

Tennessee fourth graders show big gains on state literacy tests as third graders hold steady (opens in a new window)

Chalkbeat Tennessee

June 17, 2024

Tennessee fourth graders showed significant improvement on state tests for English language arts, while third grade scores were mostly steady after achieving historic gains last year, state officials said. In a news release, Gov. Bill Lee credited the state’s comprehensive literacy strategy, including early investments in tutoring to help struggling readers improve after the pandemic disrupted schooling in 2020. Education Commissioner Lizzette Reynolds praised the hard work of students, educators, and families.

Reading Legislation Update (opens in a new window)

Language Magazine

June 17, 2024

Governor Laura Kelly signed into law the Kansas Blueprint for Literacy legislation, which would “amend teacher education programs to improve classroom instruction in reading,” adhering to “evidence-based research on phonemic awareness, phonetics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension.” See also updates for California, Oklahoma, Wisconsin, and Maryland.

On curriculum and literacy, Texas gets it (opens in a new window)

Flypaper (Fordham Institute)

June 14, 2024

The Texas Education Agency has spent three years piloting a promising set of ELA materials, which became freely available late last month: a structured and sequenced, knowledge- and vocabulary-rich curriculum for kindergarten through fifth grade, including reading materials, teacher’s guides, activity books, and supporting resources—all online, all downloadable, all free to anybody who wants to use it.

Barnes and Noble offers kids chance to earn free books through summer reading program (opens in a new window)

NBC Chicago

June 14, 2024

Barnes and Noble’s summer reading program is back in full swing this summer, with kids getting an opportunity to earn a free book. The company’s summer reading program encourages children in Grades 1-6 to read at least eight books over the summer, whether they be purchased at retail stores, borrowed from libraries or even borrowed from friends. Any child who reads at least eight books over the summer will be eligible to receive a free book from a participating Barnes and Noble store.

As ‘Chronic Absenteeism’ Soars in Schools, Most Parents Aren’t Sure What It Is (opens in a new window)

KQED Mindshift

June 14, 2024

As the school year comes to a close, one problem is plaguing educators across the country: chronic absenteeism. In 2023, roughly 1 student out of 4 was chronically absent across the school year. The problem is aligned with historic drops in reading and math scores nationwide. But parents – according to a new NPR/Ipsos poll – don’t yet see the urgencyOnly about a third of parents, our poll found, are able to properly define chronic absenteeism. Can you?

‘Summer Boost’ Shows Promise in Halting COVID Slide (opens in a new window)

The 74

June 13, 2024

Research examining thousands of students in eight cities suggests that ‘balanced’ summer program of academics, enrichment gets results. Researchers at Arizona State University examined over 35,000 Summer Boost students in eight cities, finding that in just 22 days of programming, on average, students saw about three to four weeks of reading progress and about four to five weeks in math. In reading, that works out to making up about 22% of COVID learning losses; in math, it’s about 31%. While students across all demographic groups got a boost, English Language Learners saw the strongest growth, achieving about seven to eight weeks worth of learning in just over four weeks. 

One new idea, and two old ones, for moving beyond age-based grouping of students (opens in a new window)

Flypaper (Fordham Institute)

June 13, 2024

Ever since the one-room schoolhouse faded from the American prairie, some reformers have argued that clumping students by age is ill-advised. After all, where a child’s birthday falls on the calendar is only a crude proxy for their academic readiness. Some students enter kindergarten with emerging literacy and robust knowledge, while others can’t count to ten. And any teacher will tell you of the difficulty trying to teach a class with multiple grades-worth of differences in academic readiness.

What’s a book ban anyway? Depends on who you ask (opens in a new window)

National Public Radio

June 12, 2024

“Book ban” is one of those headline-ready terms often used by the news media, including NPR, for stories about the surge in book challenges across the U.S. The practice of censoring books has been around for centuries. But what does it actually mean to ban a book today? The answer depends on who you ask. Here are a handful of definitions from people entrenched in the issue.

It’s Showtime: There’s A Lot in Store at ALA Annual (opens in a new window)

School Library Journal

June 12, 2024

The library and literary world will descend upon San Diego at the end of the month for ALA Annual. No matter the still unknown status of LibLearnX and the Youth Media Awards announcements, Annual remains the event where those honors are celebrated, issues and upcoming books are discussed, and ­librarians share ideas, interests, and sources of concern. SLJ asked attendees what they are looking forward to.

Teaching Kindergartners to Write Poetic Sentences (opens in a new window)

Edutopia

June 11, 2024

Teachers can inspire an interest in poetry by having young learners make observations about the world around them. “When my wife, Jill, asked me to work with her class, it was April and our high desert location was awakening into spring. This was an opportunity to take poetry out of the classroom and connect with the natural world. However, this was not the first time the students had been invited to respond poetically.”

School Library Investment ‘Crucial’ to Literacy Success (opens in a new window)

Language Magazine

June 11, 2024

According to a new report from the Center for American Progress, “libraries and librarians not only spark a love of learning; they are crucial to reversing low reading assessment scores across the country.” Policy recommendations include: Increase funding for school libraries; require the presence of school librarians; require federal school library data updates with appropriate definitions; and include school libraries as school-based indicators in state accountability plans.

Louisiana Pilot Program Tests New Kind of Reading Exam That Could Be a Model (opens in a new window)

The 74

June 11, 2024

In the midst of a national push to reshape how reading is taught, state leaders should take a closer look at how their tests can nudge schools to invest more effort into building students’ background knowledge and for children to spend more time immersed in reading and discussing reading whole books. A pilot program in Louisiana could present an alternative model for the country. The state has been experimenting with a new kind of exam that is closely aligned to a state-created curriculum called Guidebooks. 

Reasons to Love Libraries: 23 Notable Authors and Public Figures Share Their Joy (opens in a new window)

School Library Journal

June 07, 2024

The library world came to know and love Mychal Threets through his social media posts centered on enthusiastically recounting library stories and celebrating library joy. Threets shared five reasons he loves libraries with SLJ. The common thread among them is library joy and the human connection he says libraries represent. Here, he is joined by 22 others — like Linda Sue Park, Lois Lowry, and Jacqueline Woodson — who are pretty fond of libraries, too.

Neurodivergent Kids Flourish When They’re Taught How Their Brains Work (opens in a new window)

Scientific American

June 07, 2024

When teachers and parents talk to kids about having ADHD, autism or learning disabilities, they set them up for success. When kids have a better understanding of the condition that affects their learning, they tend to have a better self-concept, and they are more likely to feel empowered and motivated to self-advocate. These keys unlock a child’s potential, resulting in better academic performance and better mental health.

The stress of recess: Here’s how schools are improving playtime (opens in a new window)

K-12 Dive

June 06, 2024

Pandemic-related school closures and social distancing, playtime replaced by screen time, and school schedules squeezed in favor of academics are all blamed for a demise in both natural play and recess time, experts said. At Marcy Arts Elementary School in Minneapolis, teachers and administrators noticed a few years ago — when the school reopened to in-person learning after COVID-19-related closures — that some students had significant gaps in how to interact in a play setting with other students, said Assistant Principal Jessica Driscoll. 

Why focus is a superpower in the classroom: A Q&A with author Doug Lemov (opens in a new window)

Ed Source

June 06, 2024

Amid the worsening literacy and numeracy crises in our schools, Doug Lemov, former teacher, education expert and author of the bestseller “Teach Like a Champion,” believes that there should be far greater awareness of what the research says about how the brain works, that parents and teachers should know how kids learn best. Lemov says, “Attention is always the currency of learning. To learn something you first have to pay attention to it and sustain that attention. When attention is fractured, both learning and performance are lowered. And, of course, a habit of paying lesser attention reduces long-term learning. So, students both learn less and can produce poorer versions of what they do know when their focus is diminished.”

 

Want to Incorporate More Play in Learning? Try the Play Workshop Structure (opens in a new window)

KQED Mindshift

June 06, 2024

“Too often we refer to play as just play,” said Kristine Mraz, adding that the “just” implies that it has no purpose or value. As an early childhood educator, instructional coach and coauthor of Purposeful Play, Mraz advocates for incorporating guided play as a central aspect of the classroom rather than an activity reserved for recess. According to Mraz, guided play broadly refers to educational activities that are gently steered by an adult using open ended questions and prompts, while still giving children the freedom to explore a learning goal in their own way. 

Teaching Young Children About Voting (opens in a new window)

Edutopia

June 05, 2024

Classroom voting can go beyond superficial sessions of “raise your hand if….” Designing election activities that encourage children to cast a vote and abide by the choice of their group can foster a greater understanding of citizenship, civics, and responsibility to their community.

Evidenced-Based Practices for Literacy Intervention in Middle School (opens in a new window)

Edutopia

June 05, 2024

What can middle-grades teachers do with students who may not have received the evidence-based structured literacy instruction most kids need to learn how to read fluently by third grade? The Institute of Education Sciences (IES) has put together an educators’ practice guide with recommendations that can help. Here are three: teach kids to decode multisyllabic words, teach kids how to read fluently, and teach comprehension skills while building background knowledge. 

A Luminary Children’s Author You’ve Probably Never Heard Of (opens in a new window)

The New York Times

June 05, 2024

Amy Hest is a quiet giant of picture book writing whose name you may not know. The noisy giants, those with name recognition, tend to be author-illustrators: Sendak, Seuss, Steig, Carle, and more recently Blackall, Lin, Klassen, Morales. Less likely to be on your radar are authors who don’t illustrate, people whose books look different from one another because they’re illustrated by different artists. Over the course of 38 picture books, plus many chapter books and middle grade novels, Hest has paid the utmost attention to the emotional lives of her young characters.

Supporting Multilingual Learners in Developing Reading Fluency across the School Day (opens in a new window)

Language Magazine

June 04, 2024

Kate Kinsella offers evidence-aligned strategies to build reading fluency within dedicated ELD and content-area coursework. ELs require robust oral language and English language development in tandem with explicit reading and writing instruction. The Building Fluency Routines have a proven track record of improving student engagement and literacy in linguistically diverse classrooms while not requiring reading intervention certification to effectively execute. 

Writing researcher finds AI feedback ‘better than I thought’ (opens in a new window)

Hechinger Report

June 04, 2024

I wanted to understand how well ChatGPT handled a different aspect of writing: giving feedback. My curiosity was piqued by a new study, published in the June 2024 issue of the peer-reviewed journal Learning and Instruction, that evaluated the quality of ChatGPT’s feedback on students’ writing. A team of researchers compared AI with human feedback on 200 history essays written by students in grades 6 through 12 and they determined that human feedback was generally a bit better. Humans had a particular advantage in advising students on something to work on that would be appropriate for where they are in their development as a writer. But ChatGPT came close.

Pandemic Aid for Schools Is Ending Soon. Many After-school Programs May Go With It (opens in a new window)

KQED Mindshift

June 04, 2024

Fifth-grader Andreana Campbell and third-grader Kewon Wells are tending to a garden box after school at Eugene Field Elementary School in Tulsa, Okla. It’s one of countless after-school programs across the country that rely on federal pandemic-era relief dollars known as Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief, or ESSER, funds. But those federal dollars are starting to expire this fall, leaving the future of many after-school programs – including the one at Eugene Field – up in the air.

A 12-year-old from Florida has won this year’s Scripps National Spelling Bee (opens in a new window)

National Public Radio

June 03, 2024

The winner of this year’s Scripps National Spelling Bee has been crowned. Bruhat Soma, a 12-year-old from Florida, bested the competition Thursday with his spelling of “abseil,” a word used to describe descending a vertical surface area with a rope attached to one’s body. Soma spelled 29 out of 30 words correctly in Scripps’ second-ever spell-off, in which competitors have 90 seconds to spell as many words given to them as possible.

The campaign for knowledge-rich curricula is winning (opens in a new window)

Flypaper (Fordham Institute)

June 03, 2024

The drumbeat for a more nuanced treatment of the Science of Reading got louder last week with a hard-hitting new Fordham Institute monograph, Think Again: Should Elementary Schools Teach Reading Comprehension? In it, author Daniel Buck chronicles the recent history of efforts to teach reading comprehension, concluding—and here I’m using distinguished researcher Hugh Catts’ words, not Buck’s—“Reading comprehension is not a skill someone learns and can then apply in different reading contexts. It is one of the most complex activities that we engage in on a regular basis.”

Mo Willems Talks About His YouTube Channel, Summer Memories, and Stumbling Through the Creative Life (opens in a new window)

School Library Journal

June 03, 2024

Mo Willems gives us the 30-second elevator pitch for the Mo Willems Workshop YouTube channel. “Up until now, my characters have worked in books, but what do they do when they’re not being read? These shows are a chance to see my characters at play and, hopefully, encourage play at the same time. Each show goes to the core personality traits of the characters. There’s a wide, funny gap between The Pigeon’s deep assurance and shallow expertise. Knuffle Bunny is about real kids’ real stories. I like to doodle.”

Students need content-rich curricula to improve reading comprehension skills (opens in a new window)

K-12 Dive

May 31, 2024

The traditional approach to teaching reading comprehension in elementary schools may not be fully helping young readers learn the essential themes of a text. Rather, students need broader cross-disciplinary knowledge to better understand what they are reading, according to a new brief by the Thomas B. Fordham Institute. To maximize instruction in reading comprehension, Fordham recommends schools expose students to knowledge-rich curricula, and that teacher preparation programs should emphasize the importance of knowledge building.

A New Plan to Raise the Lowest Literacy Rates in the Nation (opens in a new window)

Education Week (subscription)

May 31, 2024

Amid a nationwide literacy crisis, New Mexico stands out for its dead last ranking in reading performance on the federally administered nation’s report card. Arsenio Romero has been New Mexico’s secretary of education only since last year. But he has ambitious plans to work on turning around his state’s literacy reputation, and he wants to do it fast—including a big push this summer. As part of an ambitious $30 million statewide initiative to boost literacy rates, New Mexico has planned a free four- to six-week summer reading program open to all public school students entering kindergarten through 9th grade.

When Baby Sloth tumbles out of a tree, Mama Sloth comes for him — s l o w l y (opens in a new window)

National Public Radio

May 30, 2024

Children’s book creators Doreen and Brian Cronin admit they were at first a touch apprehensive about working together as a new couple. Brian had never collaborated with an author before. But they couldn’t really help it, says Doreen. Their first picture book together was last year’s Lawrence and Sophia. They quickly followed up with Mama in the Moon, about a baby sloth who falls out of a tree at night and has to wait for his mom to s l o w l y come get him. Brian Cronin says he hopes the book helps kids fall asleep. Doreen Cronin agrees. “I think it’s comfort, safety, and I think it puts us in kind of a quiet space,” she says, “and I hope it does, out in the world. Give us some quiet space. Give kids a quiet space.”

What All Teachers Should Know About WIDA’s Test for English Learners (opens in a new window)

Education Week (subscription)

May 30, 2024

Schools are required to test the progress of their English learners each year to determine whether they still need language instruction services or can exit out of such programs. In close to 40 states, that test is known as the WIDA ACCESS test. Offered both online and in a paper format, ACCESS tests students’ proficiency in four domains: speaking, reading, listening, and writing in English. The questions are modeled along academic content they would see in regular classes. For instance, reading questions might be about a science topic. The test is checking for language use in academic contexts, not content knowledge nor social language. Teachers who specialize in English-language instruction say their general education peers play a key role in prepping students to succeed on the ACCESS test. 

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