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Isabel’s morning briefing

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* Here you go…

posted by Isabel Miller
Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 7:42 am

Comments

  1. Re: WAND story on literacy

    Wonderful. I am always reluctant to accept stories and commentary by fellow educators that take the form, “These students are lessers than previous students.” Too often such stories are more about the intransigence of colleagues.

    But I have noticed far fewer college students willing to read their books since the Covid experience. Teaching students early to read, to enjoy reading, and to learn from reading is an issue that we need to address. I blame it on online education, not the students or teachers. Hopefully, good results will be forthcoming.

    Comment by H-W Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 8:51 am

  2. ===A former police commander says that means criminals will “feel more free to do their illegal business.”===

    Statements like this certainly don’t help the police. An anonymous commander should be required to explain how raiding innocent peoples homes and handcuffing unarmed naked people reduces crime. Especially since we apparently can’t send the officers who assault innocent naked women to jail for what should certainly be considered criminal behavior.

    Comment by Candy Dogood Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 9:03 am

  3. As someone who lives in an apartment, requiring infrastructure for EV charging is a pretty big deal.

    Sure it’s only new construction but new construction will eventually become old construction. Today’s upscale bonus feature is tomorrow’s basic amenity.

    Comment by Twitter cat lady Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 9:31 am

  4. H-W,

    I would put some blame on the current standards that emphasize reading non-fiction. Not that students shouldn’t learn to read that material, but first they need to get engaged with reading in the first place.

    I’m not sure about phonics in high school though. I was hearing about a district that does that so when the science class learns new words, they go over the phonics of all new words learned. But I guess if it doesn’t take too much time it could be beneficial to ESL students and those with reading difficulties.

    Comment by cermak_rd Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 9:33 am

  5. —Statements like this certainly don’t help the police—

    It names the former officer in the article.

    Comment by Zoe Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 10:27 am

  6. Sorry, hit send too early. He says this which makes sense. Metrics are needed.

    Winstrom says that, when the Chicago Police Department was doing thousands of home searches a year, “it wasn’t as focused on violent crime as it should have been. The metrics of success weren’t always tied to actual success. It became more of a numbers game.

    “Success should be defined as: ‘Did we get guns? Did we do something to prevent violence?’ ”

    Comment by Anonymous Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 10:31 am

  7. Good grief - Anonymous is me (sorry).

    Comment by Zoe Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 10:32 am

  8. Anonymous was me. Sorry about that.

    Comment by Zoe Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 10:33 am

  9. @Cermak- I applaud any district that is teaching phonics even in high school. For too many years we got away from phonics. The evidence is indisputable, phonics works and is an essential component of learning to read and comprehend.

    Comment by JS Mill Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 10:43 am

  10. A police chief who apparently advocates for raiding people’s homes without a lot of prior clearance. Ugh, ugh and more ugh. Policing that allows for terrorizing residents in your community is unacceptable. Period - banned punctuation. Ms. Young deserves every penny of her settlement and the officer who supervised the search can’t be trusted with the power she had.

    Comment by froganon Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 11:25 am

  11. Georgia has tried a new way of teaching that follows a program that has show success in Mississippi.

    https://www.npr.org/2023/06/12/1181723966/reading-georgia-science-schools-learning-literacy

    =Teaching students early to read, to enjoy reading, and to learn from reading is an issue that we need to address.=

    I’ve have two boys. One probably hasn’t read for enjoyment ever in his life. The other just counted and he has over 300 books in his personal collection and we just started him off on some “banned” classics.

    We read hundreds maybe a thousand books to our kids by the time they were three or four. Reading starts at home and is reinforced there. Everyone should be proficient in reading but not everyone will love it.

    And in our house - reading was reading. I didn’t care if it was comics or Tolstoy.

    Comment by Cool Papa Bell Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 11:30 am

  12. Let’s hear it for teaching phonics. Long and short vowels, silent letters, r-controlled vowels, digraphs, and blends. Recognizing syllables, primary and secondary accent in multi-syllabic words.

    Recognizing homophones/homonyms using context clues: they’re, their, there; to, too, two; do, due, dew. Also included are the synonyms and antonyms.

    The Caldecott and Newberry collections (award-winning children’s fiction). The Great Books collection.

    Teaching reading is essential for every child’s success in school. One of the challenges in today’s classrooms is a shortage of experienced, trained teachers. Substitutes may not have the techniques required to implement and support reading instruction.

    Comment by Rudy’s teeth Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 1:11 pm

  13. Teaching your children the notion that the goal of life is learning how to become better…is a good place to start.

    Comment by Dotnonymous x Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 1:48 pm

  14. = And in our house - reading was reading. I didn’t care if it was comics or Tolstoy.=

    We had a well-stocked library. My go-to was always the almanac or MAD Magazine. I didn’t read literature until my late teens (almost never read what was required in school). Now I usually read several books at a time.

    Comment by Proud Papa Bear Friday, Jun 23, 23 @ 3:24 pm

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