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Keyword: literacy

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  • The teens who can barely talk - they only have an 800 word vocabulary

    01/11/2010 7:00:37 PM PST · by smokingfrog · 85 replies · 2,949+ views
    DailyMail ^ | 1-11-2010 | Luke Salkeld
    Teenagers have been warned they are becoming unemployable because they use a vocabulary of just 800 words. The limited linguistic range also consists of many made up words and 'teenspeak' which has developed through modern communication methods such as text messaging and social networking sites. Today Jean Gross, who advises the Government on children's speech, said urgent action was required to prevent children failing to find jobs because they are unable to communicate. Mrs Goss, who last week issued a stark warning over the effect of television on children's development said yesterday: 'Teenagers are spending more time communicating through electronic...
  • Reading Retriever Is a Dog of Few Words

    10/13/2009 10:59:47 AM PDT · by nickcarraway · 4 replies · 487+ views
    NBC Miami ^ | Tue, Oct 13, 2009 | BRIAN HAMACHER
    Teacher's pet inspires students at Ft. Pierce school Students having a ruff time reading have a new helper, and rather than eat their homework she's here to help with it. Abigail the golden retriever has been hitting the books hard to provide a good example for the kids at Dan McCarty Middle School in Fort Pierce. Abigail already knows how to read eight distinct terms, and her word power is proving to special needs students that anything is possible. "That’s my hope - that the kids will become more motivated, more interested in reading because having this dog that can...
  • Literacy hit squads for schools

    09/07/2009 11:49:04 PM PDT · by myknowledge · 1 replies · 217+ views
    Courier Mail ^ | September 8, 2009 | Rosemary Odgers
    FLYING squads of specialist teachers will swoop into 300 Queensland schools next year under a plan to boost literacy and numeracy results. The so-called Turnaround Teams will be deployed to low-performing schools to identify why their results are below average and develop strategies to improve literacy and numeracy levels. ``Some schools may have problems with truancy or behaviour management, others may need extra help with early childhood learning or teaching science for instance,'' Premier Anna Bligh said today. The teams are part of the State Government's three-year bid to turn around poor results in Queensland schools and will cost $9...
  • Lost in Cyberspace

    05/21/2009 10:30:20 AM PDT · by bs9021 · 1 replies · 217+ views
    Campus Report ^ | May 21, 2009 | Deborah Lambert
    Lost In Cyberspace by: Deborah Lambert, May 21, 2009 Surprise, surprise. Spending thousands of hours on the Internet apparently leaves children poorly prepared to face the challenges of adult life, according to The London Telegraph. In fact, British child psychiatrists recently claimed that “teenagers were spending up to 16 hours a day playing games online with ‘potentially severe consequences’ for their education and social opportunities.” Speaking at an educational conference in Manchester recently, John Gibson, head of the Independent Schools Association, said that compared with today’s activities, the ways that children spent their time in the 50s and 60s like...
  • Education Reform

    05/16/2009 3:14:12 PM PDT · by BruceDeitrickPrice · 10 replies · 492+ views
    Improve-Education.org ^ | April 25, 2009 | Bruce Deitrick Price
    "No matter how much money is spent, literacy rates plunge and SAT scores fall. General knowledge throughout the society becomes more scant. Our better students can’t compete against better foreign students. The depressing statistics are all around us. Everyone admits the public schools are doing a lousy job. The question is, why can't we do more to improve them?"
  • Why big city newspapers are dying

    04/17/2009 7:51:17 PM PDT · by ReformationFan · 58 replies · 2,040+ views
    WorldNetDaily ^ | 4/17/2009 | Dr. Samuel L. Blumenfeld
    The recent announcement by the New York Times that it might close down the venerable Boston Globe, unless the paper can cut costs and begin to make money, came as a shock to many Bostonians. The Times bought the Globe in 1993 for $1.1 billion because it assumed that in an area with Harvard, MIT, Tufts, Boston University, Boston College and other schools of higher learning, they would have lots of readers and make lots of money. But this much-touted Athens of America, which prides itself on its intellectual history, has become, like the rest of America, a victim of...
  • Thousands of children wrongly diagnosed with dyslexia

    04/07/2009 5:24:44 PM PDT · by bruinbirdman · 57 replies · 1,392+ views
    The Telegraph ^ | 4/7/2009
    Professor Joe Elliott, from Durham University, believes many parents with children who have difficulty in literacy lessons push for them to be diagnosed with dyslexia so they can get the extra support they need. Prof Elliott says this leads to children being falsely labelled and ignores the fact there are simply many children who struggle to read and should be given help at an early age. The academic, a director of research at the university's School of Education, said: "Many of the messages that I have received from parents have pointed out that the system has forced them to use...
  • Books Left On The Shelf: A Fifth Of Pupils Only Read Blogs And Magazines

    04/03/2009 8:02:06 PM PDT · by Steelfish · 7 replies · 486+ views
    Daily Mail (U.K.) ^ | April 03, 2009
    Books left on the shelf: A fifth of pupils only read blogs and magazines By LAURA CLARK 04th April 2009 The National Literacy Trust is backing an initiative to encourage reading - using footballers as role models One in five youngsters never picks up books outside school, a poll has found. Instead, websites and blogs have become children's reading matter of choice. Pupils ranked social networking sites, blogs, general websites and magazines above books in a major survey of their reading habits. A quarter did not believe that being a proficient reader would help them achieve success in future. A...
  • Michelle Obama: America's Lady Diana? (Slobbering Synchophantic Barf Alert!)

    01/24/2009 4:02:51 PM PST · by 2ndDivisionVet · 146 replies · 3,018+ views
    The Sunday London Times ^ | January 25, 2009 | Sarah Baxter
    The First Lady has excited the fashion world, but like Diana she would rather champion the less fortunate than be a mere clotheshorse. Michelle Obama’s flair for fashion has captivated Washington and set the hearts of glossy magazine editors aflutter. She has already eclipsed Carla Bruni, the super-model chanteuse and wife of Nicolas Sarkozy, the hyperactive French president. Not since Diana, Princess of Wales, has there been such a glamorous role model at the apex of society. In her white, one-shouldered chiffon gown, she boogied to Stevie Wonder’s Signed, Sealed, Delivered I’m Yours and slow-danced with her husband at a...
  • Closing the literacy gap - Wiser spending would better serve California schools

    01/19/2009 9:07:54 AM PST · by NormsRevenge · 17 replies · 401+ views
    San Diego Union - Tribune ^ | 1/19/09 | Editorial
    At 23 percent, California leads the nation in residents 16 and older at the lowest level of literacy. The National Assessment of Adult Literacy, released this month, is calculated by the U.S. Department of Education from 2003 data. Its estimate for California: 6 million of its 26 million adults can, at best, read and understand only “short, commonplace prose text.” At worst, they cannot read and comprehend any information written in English. Behind this eight-point increase in below-basic literacy since the last assessment in 1992 is primarily immigration. One in eight U.S. residents is an immigrant, the highest percentage in...
  • Direct Answer - A solution for the reading gap between black and white children...

    01/15/2009 4:10:25 PM PST · by neverdem · 48 replies · 1,114+ views
    The New Republic ^ | January 14, 2009 | John McWhorter
    A solution for the reading gap between black and white children was discovered four decades ago. So, why aren't we taking advantage of it?One does not expect to see New York's school Chancellor Joel Klein on the same stage as Reverend Al Sharpton. Klein is infamous for his emphasis on test scores and shutting down schools that fail to measure up. Not so long ago, Sharpton was in the barricades with Russell Simmons protesting mayor Michael Bloomberg and Klein's plan to cut New York City's education budget. Yet these days the two are teaming up for the Education Equality Project,...
  • 14 Percent of U.S. Adults Can't Read

    01/11/2009 8:12:31 AM PST · by presidio9 · 124 replies · 2,436+ views
    Live Science ^ | 01/10/09 | Robert Roy Britt
    About 14 percent of U.S. adults won't be reading this article. Well, okay, most people won't read it, given all the words that are published these days to help us understand and navigate the increasingly complex world. But about 1 in 7 can't read it. They're illiterate. Statistics released by the U.S. Education Department this week show that some 32 million U.S. adults lack basic prose literacy skill. That means they can't read a newspaper or the instruction on a bottle of pills. The figures are for 2003, the latest year available. State and county results are available here. "The...
  • Some schools refuse to write off cursive

    12/30/2008 6:16:12 AM PST · by Sopater · 149 replies · 2,578+ views
    The Sacramento Bee ^ | Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2008 | Melissa Nix
    About five years ago, San Juan High School teacher Shirley Bowers realized that half her students had no idea what she was writing on the board. "I had a student remark that he couldn't read my notes," Bowers said. His fellow classmates fessed up, too. Bauer's notes were hard to read. They were in cursive. Over the past decade, teachers and secondary students across the country have reported a trend that their parents and grandparents could scarcely imagine: The millennial generation is increasingly cursive illiterate. The digital age has pushed to the periphery a penmanship skill used for generations. The...
  • Only 17% of 8th Graders Can Read at Grade Level Overseen by Obama Education Secretary-Designee

    12/17/2008 7:26:01 AM PST · by Dubya-M-DeesWent2SyriaStupid! · 63 replies · 1,477+ views
    cnsnews.com ^ | December 17 ,2008 | Matt Cover
    Only 17% of 8th Graders Can Read at Grade Level in Chicago Schools Overseen by Obama Education Secretary-Designee Chicago Schools Chief Arne Duncan smiles as President-elect Barack Obama announces his selection to be Education Secretary, Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2008, at the Dodge Renaissance Academy in Chicago.(CNSNews.com) – In 2007, only 17 percent of eighth graders tested at or above grade level in reading in Chicago Public Schools – the school system administered by Arne Duncan since 2001. President-elect Barack Obama on Tuesday tapped Duncan to become secretary of education in the upcoming administration. Duncan, hailed by Obama as a reformer,...
  • Fred Reed: The Coming Storm - Maybe, Anyway [Golden Oldie that still applies]

    12/16/2008 9:59:10 AM PST · by 2ndDivisionVet · 22 replies · 2,238+ views
    Fred Reed's Website ^ | April 29, 2004 | Fred Reed
    The Bell Curve, an excellent book more maligned than read, pointed out a trend seldom noticed. The authors called it “cognitive stratification,” not a phrase Byron would have chosen but serviceable enough. It means the concentration of the intelligent. In 1850 people of high intelligence were dispersed through the population. If the child of a cowboy had an IQ of 160, he would probably remain in the geographical region with cowboys. He might be more successful than most, and might choose as friends the quicker wits thereabouts. Yet he would be part of the community. A cowboy could be intelligent,...
  • [The Philippines] Upbeat on outsourcing

    12/14/2008 9:34:01 PM PST · by 2ndDivisionVet · 7 replies · 712+ views
    The Manila Standard ^ | December 15, 2008 | Adelle Chua Tulagan
    How’s this for noche buena? Mother, father and sister carry packed food in plastic containers and then alternate between walking and taking public transportation, seemingly off to a special mission. Just outside a building, they prop up a table with a few chairs. They set the dishes they have brought. Brother, a call center agent, is in the graveyard shift; there are no holidays in his job. But when he sees his family outside, waving at him, he puts down his headset, turns away from his computer and walks out the door of his office for a little break. Of...
  • Michelle Obama vs. Laura Bush

    12/13/2008 6:56:16 PM PST · by 2ndDivisionVet · 74 replies · 2,725+ views
    The American Chronicle ^ | December 13, 2008 | Jeff Rivera
    One highlight of the Bush Administration has been that the first lady, Laura Bush has made literacy a pivotal part of her work with the American people. There are a lot of areas of interest that a first lady can use her power and influence to draw attention to but will Michelle Obama also make literacy an important part of her agenda? With literacy rates on the decline, and educational facilities being last on the list of priorities for many government agencies, Michelle Obama has unique opportunity to use her influence to turn the state of literacy around in the...
  • Iraqi Women Secure Opportunities Through Literacy Program

    12/10/2008 3:22:05 PM PST · by SandRat · 1 replies · 185+ views
    FORWARD OPERATING BASE RUSTAMIYAH, Iraq, Dec. 10, 2008 – One hundred Iraqi women became the first class of graduates of an adult literacy course near here that officials say is a sign of more good things to come from the partnership between Iraq and the United States. The first female graduates of an adult literacy course at the Sharquia Secondary School for Girls take pictures and celebrate before a graduation ceremony at the Baghdad school, Dec. 4, 2008. U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Jeremy Todd  (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. “This is a monumental day for these women,”...
  • America the Illiterate (a liberal gets it mostly right)

    11/13/2008 6:32:23 AM PST · by Notary Sojac · 71 replies · 2,289+ views
    Truthdig ^ | 10 Nov 2008 | Chris Hedges
    We live in two Americas. One America, now the minority, functions in a print-based, literate world. It can cope with complexity and has the intellectual tools to separate illusion from truth. The other America, which constitutes the majority, exists in a non-reality-based belief system. This America, dependent on skillfully manipulated images for information, has severed itself from the literate, print-based culture. It cannot differentiate between lies and truth. It is informed by simplistic, childish narratives and clichés. It is thrown into confusion by ambiguity, nuance and self-reflection. This divide, more than race, class or gender, more than rural or urban,...
  • Hezekiah 3:16

    11/03/2008 10:37:38 AM PST · by biscuit jane · 10 replies · 1,737+ views
    Claude Mariottini.com ^ | 01/10/07 | Dr. Claude Mariottini
    Hezekiah 3:16 The book of Hezekiah is one of the most significant books of the Old Testament. This book is often quoted in the press, cited by bloggers, and many people refer to it in daily conversation. One of the most significant passages in the book of Hezekiah is Hezekiah 3:10-16 where the author speaks about the Antichrist and the Beast. Hezekiah 3:16 reveals that the number of the Beast is 666. Anyone who knows the Bible and reads the paragraph above will know that what is written above is a bunch of nonsense. Hezekiah does not mention the number...