Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Literacy – Spanning the US :: Sioux Falls SD :: Midland MI :: Frederick MD


Literacy: Spanning the US

@REACH_Literacy
Reach Literacy Is Providing Books & Masks To Young Readers
Keloland: 4.16.2020 by Whitney Fowkes

Reach Literacy is used to providing books to people of all ages. Now, the organization is providing masks too.

The bookstore has bundles of books for kids and adults. When you purchase a kids bundle, a Reach Literacy employee will give you a mask for a child between the ages 2-10.

She said since the organization’s unable to perform its main focus to help adults learn how to read, its main focus is on the bookstore.

“Our main mission is adult literacy, so we really work with adults and we teach adults how to read. The bookstore is a supplement for that programming. We are really dead in the water right now for tutoring,” Carda said.

Adult tutoring has stopped due to social distancing for COVID-19. Another step the nonprofit has taken amid the COVID-19 pandemic is limiting their hours to 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. They began offering curbside pickup and an online bookstore. Then they began offering masks donated by one of their volunteers.  READ MORE ➤➤

Based on (7) readability formulas:
Grade Level: 6
Reading Level: fairly easy to read.
Reader's Age: 10-11 yrs. Olds
(Fifth and Sixth graders)

Local Literacy Efforts Continue Amidst Pandemic
Our Midland: 4.18.2020 by Jennifer Majorana and Kristi Kline (Dir LCCS; Dir student reading)

It is safe to say our world has been turned upside down in the past month. COVID-19 has completely changed the landscape of our community. At the Legacy Center for Community Success, all in-person tutoring and outreach has been suspended and staff are working from home. That does not mean we have stopped providing services to those who need it, though.

Literacy tutors who usually meet with their students face-to-face are trying video conferencing platforms instead. Our weekly conversation class has gained new students who were not able to attend before but can now join remotely. Our resourceful tutors are using old-fashioned phone calls, paper-based workbooks, and scrabble tiles to continue literacy tutoring.

They are also trying out different video conferencing platforms, screen-sharing software, and internet-based curriculums to keep learners focused on their goals. About 30% of our 120 tutoring pairs have transitioned to online learning in the past few weeks. Tutors and learners alike say they want to stay connected during this unprecedented time, not only for the sake of developing literacy skills, but also to maintain a sense of normalcy and rhythm.  READ MORE ➤➤

Based on (7) readability formulas:
Grade Level: 11
Reading Level: fairly difficult to read.
Reader's Age: 15-17 yrs. Old
(Tenth to Eleventh graders)

Volunteer Appreciation Week: Celebrating Our Superheroes

The Literacy Council is celebrating Volunteer Appreciation Week April 19-25 by paying tribute to our 150+ wonderful long-time and new volunteers!  You know what it takes to serve our community seven days a week.

Today, the adult learners we support through our adult literacy programs are facing even greater obstacles than ever before during these unprecedented times of the COVID-19 public health emergency – including unemployment, loss of income, health risks, challenges accessing food and other basic essentials, supporting their children’s education from home.

Our volunteers are rising to meet the challenge! Great things are happening at the Literacy Council as you continue to serve our students using any and all means to provide support as our tutoring and class instruction programs transition to using multiple online platforms that support distance learning!

Thank you for embracing change. Thank you for being a trusted and devoted source of information for your students. Thank you for your willingness to learn, serve, and engage in new ways.

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In honor of our Literacy Council volunteers, we invite you to watch this special Literacy Council Volunteer Appreciation video we created for YOU, Our Superheroes!!  WATCH

Based on (7) readability formulas:
Grade Level: 13
Reading Level: fairly difficult to read.
Reader's Age: 18-19 yrs. Old
(college level entry)


Tuesday, April 28, 2020

U.S. Appeals Court Recognizes a Federal Right of Access to Literacy via EdWeek


U.S. Appeals Court Recognizes a Federal Right of Access to Literacy
EdWeek: 4.23.2020 by Mark Walsh

In a groundbreaking decision, a federal appeals court on Thursday recognized a fundamental federal right to a basic minimum education and access to literacy.

The 2-1 decision by a panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit, in Cincinnati, revives a lawsuit brought on behalf of a group of Detroit schoolchildren over poor conditions in that city's schools, which have been under varying degrees of state control in recent years.

"The recognition of a fundamental right is no small matter," said the 6th Circuit court in Gary B. v. Whitmer. "Where, as plaintiffs allege here, a group of children is relegated to a school system that does not provide even a plausible chance to attain literacy, we hold that the Constitution provides them with a remedy."

The majority rejected the plaintiffs' arguments based on the 14th Amendment's equal-protection clause and on compulsory school attendance laws. But it recognized the rights to a basic minimum education and access to literacy as part of the 14th Amendment's guarantee of substantive due process, which is how the court has recognized rights beyond procedural due process that aren't mentioned in the Constitution, such as the right to privacy and bodily integrity.

"Plaintiffs contend that access to literary, as opposed to other educational achievements, is a gateway milestone, one that unlocks the basic exercise of other fundamental rights, including the possibility of political participation," said the court. "While the [U.S.] Supreme Court has repeatedly discussed this issue, it has never decided it, and the question of whether such a right exists remains open today."

Education as 'Social Equalizer'

The majority opinion by U.S. Circuit Judge Eric L. Clay, joined by Judge Jane Branstetter Stranch, meticulously went through Supreme Court decisions on fundamental parental rights to oversee the education and upbringing of their children, its rulings rejecting a fundamental right to education and holding that a state could not deny public education to immigrant children, and the historical significance of race in U.S. education.

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A federal district judge, though sympathetic to the plaintiffs claims, held in 2018 that the Constitution does not recognize a right to literacy.

But the 6th Circuit's decision now revives the suit.

"Beyond the abstract question of whether there is a fundamental right to a basic minimum education, plaintiffs must also have plausibly alleged that they were deprived of such an education," the majority said. "Looking at their complaint as a whole, plaintiffs' allegations—if proven true—would demonstrate that they have been deprived of an education providing access to literacy."

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The right would seem to include three basic components, the court said: facilities, teaching, and educational materials, such as books.  READ MORE ➤➤

Based on (7) readability formulas:
Grade Level: 12
Reading Level: difficult to read.
Reader's Age: 17-18 yrs. Old
(Twelfth graders)


Monday, April 27, 2020

A 56-Year-Old Finally Learned To Write His Name — Because Of A Coronavirus Lockdown via WAMU


A 56-Year-Old Finally Learned To Write His Name — Because Of A Coronavirus Lockdown
WAMU: 4.25.2020 by Sushmita Pathak

All his life, 56-year-old Pratap Singh Bora has been sticking his thumb in ink to sign documents. He didn’t go to school when he was a kid. Little did he know that he would learn to write his first words at a coronavirus lockdown center during a global pandemic.

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On April 10, Indian authorities housed Bora and dozens of other stranded migrants in a school converted into a relief camp in the town of Tanakpur along the India-Nepal border. India has set up more than 20,000 camps across the country to provide food and shelter to poor people affected by the lockdown.

But at the Tanakpur relief camp, residents get something extra: an opportunity to learn.

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When the relief camp organizers first tried to get him enrolled in the literacy program a few weeks ago, Bora was hesitant.

“He was embarrassed that he was the oldest of all the students in the class,” says municipal official Prema Thakur who teaches the laborers. Most of the students are in their thirties, says Thakur. “He used to say, ‘what am I going to do learning to read and write at this age?'” says Thakur.

But Thakur and her colleagues motivated him. They brought notebooks and pencils for their students. And after just two days of classes, Bora was able to write his name in Hindi, Thakur says. In fact, he learned faster than many of his younger classmates, including his 30-year-old son, Thakur adds.

“It felt really nice [when I wrote my name],” Bora says. “When I was a kid, we used to live in a hilly area and there was no school nearby.”

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Shukla says laborers mostly come from states that have very low adult literacy rates. India has more than one-third of the world’s illiterate adults.

Literacy programs for adults in temporary settings like relief camps are not new. Refugee camps have had similar programs for years. But conducting reading and writing classes in facilities for people stranded due to the coronavirus is a novel idea. Such shelters in many parts of India lack basic sanitation let alone learning opportunities for their inhabitants.  READ MORE ➤➤

Based on (7) readability formulas:
Grade Level: 8
Reading Level: standard / average.
Reader's Age: 12-14 yrs. Old
(Seventh and Eighth graders)


Sunday, April 26, 2020

Literacy – Spanning North America :: Huntington Beach CA :: Farmington ME :: Yellowknife NT :: Findlay OH

Literacy: Spanning North America

Picture Prompt Exercise

Happy Tuesday Tutors! Looking for ideas to help you stay in touch with your learner? Try this "Picture Prompt" exercise, it's easy and something you can do 
every day!

What other ways can you and your learner come up with to build on this exercise? We’d love to hear from you in the comments below. Enjoy!  READ MORE ➤➤


Literacy Volunteers Offering Poetry Contests, Tutoring Program
Daily Bulldog: 4.17.2020

Literacy Volunteers of Franklin and Somerset Counties has been serious about lifelong learning since 1978; during this global pandemic everyone is learning new things. LVFSC, a 501 (3c) public non profit with a mission to tutor adults with literacy goals and  promote literacy in the community, is busy right now using their web of creative and adaptive volunteers and collaborators to stay  connected with adult learners to strengthen literacy skills, support families and poets, and keep people safe.

The Annual Poetry Contest is currently underway with cash prizes in six categories and a deadline of May 15.

The LVFSC Adult Tutoring Program is very busy right now tutoring 100 adults who are participating in long distance tutoring arrangements using distance learning platforms such as telephone, video conferencing, and Facebook.  READ MORE ➤➤

Thirty Years of Friends of Literacy

April 2020 marks 30 years since the NWT Literacy Council was created. We are excited to celebrate with you all year long, starting with NWT Literacy Week from April 19 to April 25. We have several events, contests, and ways to share memories planned for the whole year. Please join us in celebrating the hard work of NWT residents in increasing the profile of literacy as well as increasing their own literacy skills over the last 30 years.

Many people have shaped the work of the NWT Literacy Council since 1990. Even more have promoted literacy in their community. We want to celebrate these people over the next year. Please help us to create a list of Friends of Literacy by contacting us with their name and why you think they are a Friend of Literacy.  READ MORE ➤➤

Habits of a Good Reader

While Habits of a Good Reader videos are not a Hancock Literacy program, we work closely with other agencies to make these videos available to everyone. These videos give parents access to understand and use the reading terminology teachers are using at school, allowing parents to use the same terms at home. This provides consistency for the child.  WATCH 01:16


Saturday, April 25, 2020

15 Ways To Use A Tablet In The Classroom via Tech Edvocate


15 Ways To Use A Tablet In The Classroom
Tech Edvocate: 3.13.2018 by Matthew Lynch

81 percent of teachers think tablets can enrich classroom learning, so let’s look at how tablets may be used effectively in the classroom to engage students and further learning

Virtual Field Trips
It is unlikely you will be able to take your students on field trips to every destination you cover in class; however, with a tablet, your students can go on virtual field trips anywhere. Some websites are even designed with this mind providing 360-degree video.

Research
Tablets are mobile internet devices; therefore, it is a portable research tool for the classroom. Students can research topics without having to leave their desks.

Reading and Listening to Books
E-books are specifically designed for use on tablets, so it makes sense to allow students to use their tablets for reading in the classroom. Additionally, tablets have speakers, which allow for easy listening to audiobooks or text-to-speech e-books.

Radio and Podcasts
Using apps such as Tune In Radio, students can listen to music, radio shows, and podcasts from all over the world on their tablets.

Presentations and Projects
Poster board projects are a thing of the past. Now, students can have tons of options for creating multimedia projects, comics, books, music, and more on a tablet. These projects can be shared and shown on your Smartboard.

Photography
Tablets have cameras, and with the right photography editing app, your students can work on creative projects or simply document class activities.  READ MORE ➤➤

Based on (7) readability formulas:
Grade Level: 11
Reading Level: fairly difficult to read.
Reader's Age: 15-17 yrs. Old
(Tenth to Eleventh graders)


Friday, April 24, 2020

Advancing Literacy With Large Print: Executive Summary via Gale


Gale: 2019

WHEN LITERACY MEETS LARGE PRINT

Rather than a catalyst for lifelong learning, reading can represent a challenging and demoralizing school experience for many of our nation’s students. According to the latest results from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) testing, almost two-thirds of 4th and 8th grade students in our schools are reading at a basic or below basic level. NAEP guidelines define the basic level as a partial mastery of fundamental skills, while the higher proficient level in reading is marked by solid academic performance and competency over challenging subject matter. Given the low level of reading mastery overall, it’s not surprising that many students say they don’t enjoy reading for schoolwork. Strong reading comprehension skills are essential for student success. If students don’t feel comfortable reading in elementary and middle school, not only will they not develop lifelong reading habits, they won’t be well prepared for high school–level work or the intensive academic and workplace reading that comes after.

This situation is especially acute for striving readers. Striving readers are students who may be unmotivated or perceive reading as having little value for them. They may lack visual acuity, vocabulary, or comprehension skills. Striving readers can also include those for whom English is a second language, have been diagnosed with attention deficit disorder (ADD), or have a learning disability like dyslexia. Besides obvious academic obstacles, striving readers face emotional and social issues. Research indicates that low achievement in reading correlates with increased referrals for school discipline and higher incidences of poor school attendance, dropping out of school, and even juvenile crime.

National thought leaders on reading instruction affirm that if a student is not intrinsically motivated to read and not engaged in what they are reading, their teacher’s explicit skill-based instruction around reading is unproductive. It is therefore critical that educators find new ways to make reading more meaningful for students by leveraging the power of context and comfort in the reading process to increase student engagement, elevate reading comprehension, and support the development of lifelong reading habits.

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KEY RESEARCH FINDINGS

STUDENTS
Felt positive change in their perception of reading
Students reported a 43% reduction in feelings of anxiety about reading when using the large print format.

Grew in personal self-efficacy
Compared to other reading experiences, nearly 60% of students in grades 6–8 said they were better able to stay focused and did not lose their place due to distractions when reading large print.

Wanted greater access to large print books
54% of students in grades 3–12 in the study said that school reading experiences would be more enjoyable if all books were large print.

TEACHERS
Attributed large print as helping to develop stronger reading skills
3 in 4 of teachers said students reading below grade level demonstrated increased reading comprehension and better retention with the large print books.

Developed an expanded perception on how various striving readers can benefit from large print
As a result of exposure to large print, 4 in 5 teachers said large print would benefit their students who have trouble tracking when reading or lack self-confidence in their reading abilities.

Recommended and will continue using large print
95% of teachers said they’re likely to use large print text in the upcoming school year with their students.

OUTCOMES
Improved reading mindsets
69% of striving readers said they enjoyed reading the large print text more than any other class books during the school year. Only 20% of striving readers who read the standard print edition of the identical title said the same.

Increased Lexile levels and comprehension scores
One school with access to large print text increased their Lexile reading levels by 2–3 times the average recommended growth for middle school students. READ MORE ➤➤

Based on (7) readability formulas:
Grade Level: 15
Reading Level: difficult to read.
Reader's Age: College graduate