Teaching Phonics: If your child has trouble putting the sounds together (Blending)

If your child has trouble putting the sounds together (Blending)

We are repeating this information because the subject of “blending” arises more often than any other in our letters and emails from Parents embarking on teaching their own children to read

We recently had a Facebook email question from Rebecca.  She  said her 5 year old daughter was having trouble putting together the sounds to be able to say a word like sat.  She recognized s-a-t but couldn’t seem to blend the individual letters into one word: sat. We thought our reply to Rebecca could be helpful to other Moms in teaching their children whether using Alpha-Phonics or any other phonics program.  Here is our reply:

Dear Rebecca,

Thank you for using Alpha-Phonics.

I think you will find it a very easy program to use.

The question you write is frequently asked.

You should try to finish one lesson before going on to the next one.

The solution to your daughter’s sounding out slowly is usually solved by a little extra practice.  One tip we have found is for you to place your finger below the word, like sat.  Slowly move the finger from left to right and have her sound out the individual sounds as you move your finger.  Practice each new word a few times that way, increasing the speed of your finger movement a little each time.  Pretty soon she will be putting (blending) the sounds together and s-a-t will become sat to her.

There may be some times when you might want to move ahead to the next lesson even if she has not totally mastered the current lesson.  That is ok. Especially this is the case when you have a lesson with a fairly long list of words.  You can work back and forth a little, between the current lesson and the new one.

The most important advice I can give you is to be patient.  Children all have different speeds of learning the sounds as you go.  Some pick the idea up almost instantly and others take longer.  If your daughter needs more time that does not mean there is anything wrong with her.  Often a parent will tell us that their child seemed to learn very slowly and, all of a sudden, then seem to take off like lightening.  

 If  each time  you should quickly look over the next lesson in the back of the book and read through it, then turn to the corresponding lesson for the student  in the front of the book and pretend you are the student, and try it yourself, you will be all set to show it to your student.  Each lesson usually takes only a few minutes.

Also, please be sure, if you have not already done so, to read the 3 pages of “Tips” found beginning on page 169. They condense the most often asked questions we have had in our over 37 years of helping parents use Alpha-Phonics. 

Please always feel free to contact us if you ever have any other questions.  We know you will both do very well with the program,

 –Peter Watt for The Paradigm Co., Inc.

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 Going Back to Virtual Learning: The Challenges of Reopening High Schools

 Going Back to Virtual Learning: The Challenges of Reopening High Schools

High schools face unique difficulties reopening, a teacher finds, when her school goes back to virtual learning after a case of Covid-19.

November 10, 2020
Wesley Bedrosian / The iSpot

On our third day of hybrid instruction, my high school literature class and I played a game of telephone. One of the six masked students in my classroom shared a sentence about an event that day, and one of the 16 students calling in on Zoom tried to understand and repeat it. A “ride on the bus with freshmen” morphed into a “drop-kicked alien in a fiery bus.” Clearly, no one could hear anyone well in my hybrid classroom, where the goal was to teach an in-person cohort and at-home group at the same time.

After a virtual start to the year, my high school had been preparing for months for the transition back to the building. Yellow arrows were placed in hallways to indicate the right direction to walk; buckets of hand sanitizer and cleaning wipes were put in every classroom; the ventilation system was upgraded. Teachers like me felt a mix of excitement and dread: We were ready to see students and colleagues in person again, but we worried it wouldn’t last long. We were right.

A couple of hours after my students got on buses that afternoon, an announcement came over the loudspeakers telling staff to check their emails and then go home. We knew what that meant. Someone in the building had tested positive for Covid-19, and after just three days, we were going back to full-time virtual learning. I threw my books in my giant teacher bag, shut down my computer, and turned off my air purifier.

THE CHALLENGE OF HIGH SCHOOL

As I sat in my car with my mask still on, I was stunned, relieved, and disappointed all at once. As much as I dislike my heavily trafficked commute—and questioned how well hybrid learning would work—it had been terrific to be back in the classroom after teaching remotely. While I was beginning to feel comfortable with the tools and rhythms of virtual teaching, I’ve continued to find it challenging to elicit enthusiastic responses from students. In person, I could improvise and connect more easily.

Before driving home, I scrolled through Twitter and came across several writers proclaiming that schools were safer than ever and were not to blame for increased Covid-19 cases. Recent data showed low infection rates in schools opening in studies from Germany, Spain, and Utah, they said, and from one database where schools self-report cases. Yet as a teacher in a high school, I feel that the conclusions drawn in these studies do not account for the unique dynamics of American high schools like mine that make it challenging to implement the research-recommended best practices.

Unlike elementary and middle schools, high schools are rarely able to put students in bubbles or pods, which are supposedly key to keeping rates down and help contain the spread of the virus if someone contracts it. They are increasingly more like colleges, where students choose from an array of classes and then switch between them—except, unlike in college, we’re all mixing in the same large building throughout the day. That means one or two infections can send an entire school home.

Particularly challenging for high schools, as well, is finding substitutes for the teachers in all five or six classes that an infected high school student might have attended in a day—and who now have to quarantine.

Certainly, as the pandemic drags on and cases continue to increase, high schools may have to rethink the buffet option and make cohorts fewer than 400 students and more like 20–40 students, as they are in K–5. They might have to start regular random testing, as some colleges and schools in NYC are doing, which is a notable component of the international school comparisons. High schools also might end before lunch, to avoid having hundreds of unmasked students eating together. And teachers are already talking about how to take classes outside; spring might be the perfect time to try this.

What we have learned so far is that access to reliable and fast testing is critical to community and school safety, that outdoor space and fresh air are more important than ever, and that the quality of tech matters for continuous engagement. We also know that many of our school buildings have needed ventilation upgrades for decades—and it took a pandemic to force the issue.

THINKING AHEAD

I will be excited to return to my classroom—hybrid or fully in person—when rates of the virus are lower in the community. If or once we return this year, we are supposed to get better mics and more time to figure out how to teach in two places at once. I think cohort by cohort, week by week, students might even get real copies of books.

But it is still very much a work in progress. The lack of a concerted strategy and guidelines in the United States has led many educators to feel abandoned overwhelmed; most districts have had to figure things out as they go along. It has taken an enormous amount of energy from nurses and building leaders, who are now spending hours coming up with new protocols for what were once basic practices, like fire drills.

In the absence of a national strategy, the data on Covid-19 cases in local communities will continue to drive decisions in schools, and teachers will continue to serve as frontline reporters on what’s being missed. For families, the issue of returning is also fraught, and they feel very differently about returning in person, depending on their experiences during the pandemic.

While at first my district’s plan was to stay remote for just two weeks, with rising

Alpha-Phonics easy to teach, phonics reading instruiction that is effective, simple and inexpensive

Lear wisdom from Moms who taught their own children to read with Alpha-Phonics a longtime favorite of Homeschoolers to teach Phonics reading

community rates, we will now continue fully remote through the new year. Teachers and students pivoted quickly back to virtual learning—something we’ve become better at since the spring, with our Jamboards and Pear Decks and shared Google docs. But my attic home office suddenly feels slightly more claustrophobic than it did just two weeks ago.

As it gets darker and colder—and motivation to learn virtually is likely to decline—I’m planning to reemphasize virtual projects and exhibitions of work, open conversations, and offline goals with students. As one student said, “It’s really hard to look forward to anything when everything you look forward to keeps getting canceled.” I am hoping that even a class presentation can be a date on the calendar that is, if not exciting, something to anticipate.

CONCERNED PARENTS:  If you are worried that your children may not be learning to be good readers, please consider Alpha-Phonics, used by tens of thousands of Parents to easily turn their kids into excellent readers.  They have been doing so for over 37 years, quickly, inexpensively and with no special training needed by the Parents.  Look below for all the details:

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In the Covid Era: Is “Hometown U”. Better than Harvard?

The Power of Independent Thinking

In the Covid Era: Is “Hometown U”. Better than Harvard?

facebook sharing buttonA large portion of American college students are studying entirely remotely, a dramatic change from the norm of just one year ago. Students attending online schools like Western Governors University are learning the same way students do at elite Ivy League institutions. How do current students feel about their educational experience, and is there any correlation between conventional measures of excellence and quality and the perceptions of current students actually experiencing (enduring?) remote learning? Perhaps even more relevant, are students paying $50,000 or more in tuition fees experiencing a superior experience to those paying much less, say $15,000 or less?

TestMax, a test preparation company with a six-digit number of student names in its database, recently surveyed those students, asking them to answer five questions relating to their satisfaction about the current education experience. Students from more than 440 institutions replied, and the schools that TestMax thinks got the most positive evaluations were, in general, non-prestigious schools, many with little or no residential campus presence, while Ivy League schools such as Harvard, Yale, and Princeton ranked in the bottom half of the sampled schools.

The cheaper, less prestigious schools generally outperformed the expensive, elite and prestigious institutions, with a few exceptions such as Pomona College. A few respected public schools, such as Purdue and the universities of Arizona and Florida, also were highly rated, as was online pioneer the University of Phoenix. Mehran Ebadolahi, CEO of TestMax, himself a UCLA and Harvard graduate, perceptively noted to me that Harvard Law is usually outranked by Yale because Harvard accepts more students—the key to high rankings is denying education to potential students! Where else in life does success come from turning away paying customers?

This is purely a customer (student) satisfaction survey, with the students asked five questions, including: “How effective is your school in delivering remote education?” They were also asked, “How effective is your university at remaining socially connected (albeit remotely) during the COVID-19 pandemic?” This second question gets to a key deficiency of remote learning—the lack of a sense of community and interaction between students, faculty and others. College for many is as much of a socialization mechanism as a learning community.

Why do students attend expensive Ivy League and other prestigious private schools instead of cheaper alternatives offering, in many students’ eyes, a more satisfying educational experience? The bottom line is still the diploma, and a diploma from a prestigious private school will typically produce a large amount—sometimes a million dollars—more lifetime income to recipients. It’s not what you learn, or how much you enjoy it, but how potential users of your future labor market services perceive the value of your diploma.

The TestMax survey can be justly criticized on many grounds. It uses a non-random sample of students, and some schools are completely unrepresented while other obscure ones are not. Is the good of a school solely determined by student satisfaction, or are the views of others, including the users of the services of the schools, relevant? The survey mixes together community colleges and four-year institutions. All that said, I expect that an impeccably designed survey done by a respected purveyor of public opinion like Gallup would probably show roughly similar results.

Even long before Covid, many persons argued that top-ranked schools often were neglectful of their undergraduates, paying far more attention to prized graduate students and research. A highly distinguished scholar who taught at Stanford once told me that he sent his son to Claremont McKenna instead of Stanford despite the fact he could get full tuition remission at Stanford, simply because Claremont McKenna cares far more for its flock of undergraduates (disclosure: I once taught at Claremont McKenna).

Will the temporary shift to remote learning lead to greater acceptance of alternative ways of credentialing for vocational competence? I would bet if the current all-remote learning environment continued for years, the prestige schools like Princeton, Stanford, Duke and Northwestern would lose their luster and dominant positions on the reputational scale. While these prestige schools are not in the dire financial shape that many far less exalted schools are, their long-term reputation also is highly dependent on ending the coronavirus pandemic.

RICHARD K. VEDDER is a Senior Fellow at the Independent Institute, Distinguished Emeritus Professor of Economics at Ohio University, and author of Restoring the Promise: Higher Education in America.

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Reading scores drop, math scores low. Will high school seniors be ready for graduation?

 

Reading scores drop, math scores low. Will high school seniors be ready for graduation?

Erin Richards

USA TODAY
American high schoolers are approaching graduation with less of a grasp on reading and still-low math scores – and that’s before factoring in the pandemic.

The average reading score for high school seniors dropped between 2015 and 2019, while math scores for those soon-to-be-graduates remained flat, according to the latest round of national test results released Wednesday.

And just as in many other aspects of American society, the divide between the academic haves and have-nots keeps growing. The most-proficient 12th graders – those with scores at the top of their class – are scoring better in reading than they did nearly 30 years ago. The least-proficient 12th grade readers are even further behind than they were in 1992, with scores that declined in that time period.

Clancy Bryant, an English teacher in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, teaches both in-person students and remote students who see him through the camera.

The latest look at reading and math achievement for students on the cusp of graduating comes from the National Assessment of Educational Progress, also known as the Nation’s Report Card. The exams are overseen by a branch of the federal government.

The declines for seniors resemble the decline in reading scores for fourth- and eighth-grade students, where the least-proficient students are losing the most ground. National test results for the younger students were released in October 2019.

U.S. students at a plateau:At 4th and 8th grade, reading and math scores haven’t budged

The pattern of decline concentrated among the lowest-performing students – across multiple grade levels and subjects – is an urgent problem, said Peggy Carr, the testing agency’s associate commissioner of assessment.

In math, the overall average score for 12th graders held steady between 2015 and 2019. But beneath that average is a familiar trend: Scores for the lowest-performing students dipped. Since 2005, the only seniors to post a little improvement in math were those in the highest-performing bracket.

That’s, of course, a good thing for those high achievers – most of whom tend to come from economically stable backgrounds. But it’s worrisomefor the futures of the lowest-performing students, who tend to be economically disadvantaged.

All races are represented in those lowest-performing students, but Black and Latino students make up the largest share, Carr said.

Shawna Diedrich helps her son, Trey Diedrich, study for a math test last fall at their home in Mitchell, South Dakota. Even though the test was on content Trey said he learned the previous year, he said he did not understand how to do some of the problems.

How do the NAEP exams work?

The national assessments were given to more than 52,000 public and private school 12th graders between January 2019 and March 2019. Student performance is grouped into categories such as basic, proficient or advanced.

The bar for proficiency is high: Only 24% of seniors scored at or above “proficient” in math in 2019. That figure hasn’t changed significantly since 2005, the first administration of this math assessment for seniors.

In reading, 37% of seniors scored at or above proficient in 2019. That’s about the same as in 2015, but down from 1992, when 40% of U.S. seniors scored at least proficient on the exam.

The exams also survey students about what they’re doing inside and outside the classroom. Half of seniors in 2019 said they read literature outside of school at least once or twice a year. Around 1 in 4 seniors said they never read stories or novels outside of school.

Why are scores still so low?

A number of factors could explain the stagnation and disparities in scores, assessment experts said.

High school graduation rates have improved, which means more lower-performing students are staying in school – and therefore are part of the testing pool. Student poverty rates have increased, and poverty generally tracks with lower academic performance. And, as technology and broadband internet have become increasingly necessary for learning, the U.S. also has been wracked by major disparities in access, laid bare recently by the pandemic and remote learning.

Andrea Johnson, an English teacher at Salem High School in Virginia, said her school also has seen a rapid rise in the number of students learning English.

“That’s going to affect reading test scores,” said Johnson, who is also Virginia’s 2020 teacher of the year.

Virginia has pushed schools to double-down on literacy instruction since the last round of NAEP scores, Johnson said. At all grade levels, teachers are helping lower-performing readers by giving them a text that’s at their level, paired with a text that’s on grade level, so they can understand the material while also making comparisons, she said.

Teachers also have to figure out ways to better hook students on reading, she added.

“How do we balance the literary canon and texts they need for understanding with student choice, where they can read something where they see themselves reflected as the hero?” Johnson said.

In this file photo, Sarah Brown Wessling talks to a fifth grader about his reimagining of a fairy tale, an exercise in writing from a different perspective.

Sarah Brown Wessling, an English teacher at Johnston High School in Iowa, has been teaching for 23 years. Moving students to proficiency hinges on an enormous number of factors, she said.

In school, that could mean making sure teachers have enough time to give all students individual attention. Or it could mean retaining teachers of color so that an increasingly diverse student population sees themselves represented in the people guiding them.

School and success do not operate in isolation from the rest of society, she added.

“If we’re not talking about the big picture, from health care to mental health and even immigration, then we’re not really serious about moving students from Point A to Point B,” Brown Wessling said. “Otherwise, we’re really good at moving students who are already winning.”

Contact Erin Richards at (414) 207-3145 or erin [dot] richards [at] usatoday [dot] com. Follow her on Twitter at @emrichards.

Did you know every year many 1,000’s of parents teach their own children to READ? Many of them have used  Alpha-Phonics because they have found it can easily be used to teach their children to read at any stage of their reading instruction.  Your Kids can make a lot of headway in only a couple of weeks with this proven program.  Alpha-Phonics is easy to teach, is always effective and requires no special training for the Parent.   It works !  And it is  very inexpensive.  You CAN DO it !!  Follow the links below to know all about the time-tested (37 + years) Alpha-Phonics :

 

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Bill Gates Overlooks the Vital Role of Families in Shaping Children’s Academic Outcomes

OCTOBER 31, 2017 Institute for Family Studies

Bill Gates Overlooks the Vital Role of Families in Shaping Children’s Academic Outcomes

Highlights

  • When it comes to teaching students the importance of waiting until marriage to have children, there is silence.
  • Educators must recognize our necessary role in forging the consensus that families matter.

Editor’s Note: This essay is reprinted with permission from the Thomas B. Fordham Institute. Read the original article here.

When Bill Gates speaks about priorities, people listen. When he omits speaking about what should be priorities, people listen even more.

During my one year as the Deputy Director of Postsecondary Success at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, my colleagues and I often talked about the “Gates effect”—the extraordinary influence that the foundation’s goals and grants wield with policymakers, philanthropists, researchers, K–12 practitioners, and virtually every institution that is trying to improve outcomes for kids.

That’s why it is important to read “Our Education Efforts Are Evolving,” a transparent and powerful essay by Bill Gates. He shares what he and his wife Melinda have learned since they and the Gates Foundation became involved in education reform in 2000, and delivers a five-pronged plan for the foundation’s future. Gates bemoans the fact that “schools are still falling short on the key metrics of a quality education,” and laments the persistence of the same disparities in achievement and postsecondary success for children of color and low-income students that motivated their action two decades ago.

The niggling question is why progress has been so meager despite the Gates Foundation’s billions of dollars of investment, as well as the enormous time and money spent by other foundations, philanthropists, and local, state, and federal governments—all no doubt influenced by Gates’s strategies to improve educational outcomes for kids.

Undaunted and still impatiently optimistic, however, the Gates Foundation expects to invest close to $1.7 billion in U.S. public education over the next five years. Unfortunately, the vision on which it is based and that Gates illustrates in his essay overlooks the vital role that families play in shaping the academic outcome of America’s children, and what schools might do to help their students form strong families as adults. Indeed, neither “parent” nor “family” are among the essay’s 3,000 words.

This lack of expectation of parent accountability is weird coming from a foundation that’s done so much to usher in the era of school accountability. And it’s simply stunning considering the foundation’s legendary and deserved reputation for expertly using data to inform its policies and find the true causes of the ills it tries to remedy.

Five decades ago, the enduringly relevant Coleman report established the primacy of family structure and stability in driving educational outcomes for children. At the time of that publication, 6 percent of American children were born to unmarried women. Since then, that number has skyrocketed, especially among women and men under the age of twenty-five. (See figure 1.) According to a recent CDC report, 2016 was the tenth consecutive year that 40 percent of American children of all races were born outside of marriage.

Source: “Births to Unmarried Women,” Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics,
retrieved October 26, 2017.

Indeed, in the 17 years the Gates Foundation has been investing in education, more than an estimated 15 million babies of all races were born nationwide to unmarried women under the age of twenty-five. And, based on 2015 data, almost half of these children were born to unwed mothers with multiple children—an almost certain recipe for poverty, stress, and poor educational outcomes for the single mom and (typically) her children.

This “new normal” of permanent, staggeringly high nonmarital birth rates is a catastrophe for our country. And it’s an overwhelming challenge for those of us who have the responsibility to educate children whose disadvantage begins in utero and multiplies before they step foot into a preschool classroom.

Of course, there are extraordinary single parents whose children defy the gargantuan odds against them and succeed in life. Similarly, the child of a low-income couple in stable marriage is not guaranteed a ticket out of poverty.

So, there are always exceptions, but the data are clear on the myriad difficulties facing these kids. Children from poor, unstable families led by unmarried young women and men are, for example, more likely to suffer cognitive impairments as infants, to be chronically absent in elementary school, and to have repeated disciplinary issues. And they’re much less likely to attend an effective preschool and read proficiently by third grade.

Consider, too, the work of Dr. Kathy Edin, who has studied low-income couples for decades. Due to a high degree of what she terms “re-partnering,” she’s found that more than half of children born to single parents will see their moms or dads form up to four or more romantic relationships during the child’s first five years of life. Many of these young people lack good education and aren’t ready emotionally, financially, or otherwise to raise a child. And far too many of the young men involved—themselves facing unemployment challenges—seem to be in a state of perpetual adolescence.

Mr. Gates’s failure to mention a strategy for educators to help stop the creation of fragile families is therefore a serious oversight worthy of critique. But it’s also a distressingly common problem in education policy, in which reform leaders like Mr. Gates rarely cite family fragmentation as a central contributor to the poor longitudinal outcomes of the charter sector.

Ironically, these same reformers regularly rise up against whack-a-mole crises like the NAACP’s mystifying opposition to charter schools, or Randi Weingarten’s absurd demonization of school choice, or the latest kerfuffle with celebrity hypocrite Matt Damon. But the reality is that these passing hullabaloos are nothing compared to the damage done by fragile families—a force that ceaselessly trudges forward, perpetuates poverty and achievement gaps, and severely hampers the children’s chances to lead a better life.

My point is not that Mr. Gates and other education reform leaders should present family breakdown as an excuse for the education system’s lack of progress. Far from it. The question is whether schools could be doing something to help their students form strong families as adults—to avoid perpetuating the cycle of fragile families and intergenerational poverty. And the clear answer is “yes.” Educators can teach students the sequence of life choices—education, work, marriage, then children—that is highly correlated with economic and life success, and that would empower students to overcome substantial race- and class-based institutional barriers.

To read the balance of this article CLICK HERE

Ian Rowe is a senior visiting fellow at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute and the CEO of Public Prep.

Editor’s Note: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or views of the Institute for Family Studies.

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Small Christian colleges set attendance records despite pandemic

 

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Small Christian colleges set attendance records despite pandemic

5 Church of Christ schools lead way

Small Christian colleges set attendance records despite pandemic

Tennessee’s Freed-Hardeman University | Courtesy Freed-Hardeman University

Five of the 10 Church of Christ-affiliated universities have record enrollments this fall, as do several other primarily undergraduate United States schools emphasizing on-campus instruction while upholding biblical inerrancy.

The schools are distant outliers in the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center data for four-year private higher education, which showed that sector’s student body down 2% from last fall. The institutions hemorrhaged the worst with first-time students of traditional age — 11.1% lower for those 18-20 and 29.9% among enrollees 21-24.

However, the Church of Christ universities gained up to 26%, all having a majority of students on campus. They averaged 1,895 students this fall.

Freed-Hardeman University in Henderson, Tennessee, reported a 3% jump to 2,188, typical of the Church of Christ institutions.

“Our students come from the same basic faith; the geography of our schools makes us different,” Dave Clouse, the school’s vice president for community engagement, told The Christian Post. “We don’t really compete with each other and have very little overlap.”

Also reporting record enrollments were Dordt College (Christian Reformed Church), Bethany Lutheran College (Evangelical Lutheran Synod-Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod), Milligan University (Independent Christian Churches), California Baptist University (Southern Baptist), Carson-Newman University (Southern Baptist), Samford University (Southern Baptist), Arizona Christian University (nondenominational) and Colorado Christian University (nondenominational).

Only CBU and CCU exceed 6,000 students.

“Students, whether they realize it or not, are looking for a place where they can belong,” Clouse explained to CP about smaller schools dominating the lists. “It’s a lot easier to belong where they fit in and know people. … With a more intimate relationship in a smaller campus environment, you’re not going to get lost.”

Freed-Hardeman also has put donor advancement and student recruitment together under Clouse, and he took the university’s president, David Shannon, on the road to meet with both groups. “The personal contact created a lot of momentum that’s begun to feed on itself,” Clouse said, adding he ramped up social media in “a huge way.”

“If you boil it all down, it’s about building relationships,” he summed up.

York College of Nebraska, a school now of 640 in a town of 7,700, led the Church of Christ in percentage increase. Staffers have been busy checking temperatures, maintaining social distancing, and otherwise keeping COVID-19 away while welcoming 132 more students.

“We can face this year with boldness because the same amazing God who spoke the universe into existence is actively at work in and through us at York College,” York College President Sam Smith said in a statement.

Samford University set an enrollment record for the 12th straight year, with 5,729 students in fall classes.

R. Philip Kimrey, vice president for student affairs and enrollment management, credited his admissions team with great creativity in its virtual adaptation of spring recruitment events such as Admitted Student Day, campus visits and college fairs.

Staffers also had a series of webinar-style topical conversations and offered personalized individual meetings and appointments. Virtual Bulldog Days, Samford’s new student orientation, attracted more than 1,000 families, a record.

At the Alabama school, 86% of fall courses include some elements of in-person learning. Approximately 52% of courses are face-to-face, and 34% of courses are hybrid, having online modules along with in-person classes.

“It is gratifying to see the hard work and resilience of our faculty and staff and their steadfast commitment to making this a place of superior learning and extraordinary personal development,” Kimrey said.

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Kids are now in school at majority of nation’s biggest districts – just as COVID cases surge

Kids are now in school at majority of nation’s biggest districts – just as COVID cases surge

The U.S. has entered a second round of back-to-school, just as the coronavirus surges around the nation.

In smaller school districts, careful in-person reopenings in August and September didn’t lead to an explosion of COVID-19 cases. And now, the country’s largest school systems, which had largely eschewed in-person instruction, are venturing partially back into the classroom.

The majority of the 15 largest districts in the nation now have at least some students in school buildings. Only two of those districts had any form of in-person learning as of early September.

Large schools had faced bigger hurdles than smaller ones as they waited out case spikes in major cities and concerns grew about possible outbreaks in school buildings. Now, as several major districts have decided to try to meet in person, rising COVID-19 cases again threaten their efforts.

District leaders, teachers and parents debated for months how safe it was to reopen schools. Teachers unions organized against in-person learning, while parents came down on both sides of the issue, concerned both about virus spread and about their students’ well-being and learning loss.

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Kris Reddout, a fifth grade teacher, attends a Utah Safe Schools Mask-In urging the governor's leadership in school reopening during a rally July 23 in Salt Lake City.

The schools that jumped into reopening in August and September were largely smaller, whiter and wealthier than the country’s biggest districts. That didn’t give larger districts – which serve far more low-income families and people of color, for whom virus deaths have been higher – enough data to make decisions.

Even scientists were split on the issue. That’s in part because there’s no federal effort to track COVID-19 cases in schools. But schools were determined to reopen if community spread stayed manageable, because keeping them closed, experts say, could harm children both educationally and developmentally.

In many schools, reopening is going smoothly. Across the country, the number of students attending virtual-only school has decreased by 25 percentage points since Labor Day, according to Burbio.

Georgia’s Columbia County schools, a midsized district of about 27,000 students, have given the option to elementary students to attend classes in person every day for at least 13 or 14 weeks now, said parent Ashley Reese.

A Columbia County student returns to Evans Middle School in August 2020.

Her daughters attend kindergarten and fifth grade at River Ridge Elementary, and she chose in-person learning from the start. The district has had some cases of COVID-19, but schools have not shut down, Reese said.

“It’s been wonderful to have them at school,” she said. “They wear masks every day. It’s just normal now.”

But many of the largest districts that tiptoed into reopening in recent weeks have already reverted to online instruction because of rising infections.

And Boston Public Schools announced Oct. 22 it was moving its nearly 50,000 students to completely remote learning because of a recent spike in COVID-19 cases in the city. The move means students with special needs will no longer meet in school buildings, for the time being.

Earlier that week, Houston Independent School District, the largest public school system in Texas, closed 16 schools after allowing students back in classrooms the previous day.

‘Mama is tired’:After school closures, some families burn out on online classes, others thrive

Teachers blamed more than students

In the second-largest district in Texas, Dallas’ Independent School District opened in early September with a month of virtual learning. Then, the district began offering an in-person option for younger grades and a hybrid model at the high school, where students may attend in person two days a week and learn from home on the other days.

Currently, about half of the district’s families have chosen to send their children to school at least a couple days a week. The rest have remained virtual.

The district has seen about 500 cases of the virus among Dallas’ 220 schools – about 280 students and the rest staff members, said Superintendent Michael Hinojosa. Certain groups of students who had contact with infected individuals have had to quarantine, but Hinojosa said he’s only had to implement a temporary closure at three schools.

When students at the district get off the bus or enter the school, they must pass a temperature check in order to attend class in person that day. They are required to wear a mask for most of the school day, with a few breaks during outside moments, and are seated in bubble groups of four students per Plexiglas divider.

Throughout the school buildings in the district, posters warn students to “cover your cough” and detail COVID-19 symptoms. Markers – 6 feet apart – are taped to the floor.

With such thorough coronavirus procedures, Assistant Superintendent of School Leadership Leslie Stephens attributes the spread to teachers. Some educators, she said, are “congregating and maybe not following all of our safety precautions that we have in place.”

Both Dallas and Houston reopened schools in October, as the state surpassed California as the nation’s case leader, with more than 893,000 COVID-19 infections as of Oct. 30. State data on transmission in Texas public schools shows that over 25,000 students and teachers have reported positive COVID-19 cases.

Still, Stephens said it was highly unlikely that Dallas would move to a fully virtual instruction. And despite rising COVID-19 rates, some schools around the country are pressing forward with returning to classrooms.

Signs in a hallway remind students to wear masks and distance themselves at Fox Trail Elementary School in Davie, Florida.

Oregon leaders opened the door Friday for more districts to return to in-person instruction in places where transmission is low.

Conceding that the virus will be part of American life for the near future, and that doing work and school from home is not sustainable for many families, Democratic Gov. Kate Brown and health officials relaxed metrics for school reopening that would allow up to 130,000 students statewide to return to class.

“With adherence to safety protocols – wearing face coverings, handwashing, physical distancing – what is really clear is that schools are not superspreaders,” Brown said in a news conference Friday.

Meanwhile, she said, the challenges of learning through the internet are steep for many students.

Remote learning for kids without internet:Half of U.S. lacks high-speed internet access

Community spread

Texas and Oregon aren’t the only states around the nation with rising COVID-19 cases. Infections have risen in most other states, such as Florida, home to several of the nation’s largest districts.

More than half of the state’s families returned their children to school in person, officials said last month.

But mirroring a new uptick in the spread of the COVID-19, a rising number of cases are emerging in Florida schools, prompting closures.

In the past week, Palm Beach County’s school district reported 181 confirmed cases among students and staff since campuses reopened last month.

The increase in cases has some parents and educators worried, including school board member Dr. Debra Robinson, a retired physician who criticized the district’s plan to reopen classrooms last month.

She told the Palm Beach Post, part of the USA TODAY Network, that she had concerns about the rising cases in the area and the cases on campus.

“I am concerned/worried about both,” she said in a text message. “The school rate and community rate are intertwined.”

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Why Teaching Poetry Is So Important

EDUCATION

Poetry is far more than Dead Poets Society .TOUCHSTONE PICTURES
16 years after enjoying a high school literary education rich in poetry, I am a literature teacher who barely teaches it. So far this year, my 12th grade literature students have read nearly 200,000 words for my class. Poems have accounted for no more than 100.

This is a shame—not just because poetry is important to teach, but also because poetry is important for the teaching of writing and reading.

I have always rejected these clichéd mischaracterizations born of ignorance, bad movies, and uninspired teaching. Yet I haven’t been stirred to fill my lessons with Pound and Eliot as my 11th grade teacher did. I loved poetry in high school. I wrote it. I read it. Today, I slip scripture into an analysis of The Day of the Locust. A Nikki Giovanni piece appears in The Bluest Eye unit. Poetry has become an afterthought, a supplement, not something to study on its own.

In an education landscape that dramatically deemphasizes creative expression in favor of expository writing and prioritizes the analysis of non-literary texts, high school literature teachers have to negotiate between their preferences and the way the wind is blowing. That sometimes means sacrifice, and poetry is often the first head to roll.Yet poetry enables teachers to teach their students how to write, read, and understand any text. Poetry can give students a healthy outlet for surging emotions. Reading original poetry aloud in class can foster trust and empathy in the classroom community, while also emphasizing speaking and listening skills that are often neglected in high school literature classes.Students who don’t like writing essays may like poetry, with its dearth of fixed rules and its kinship with rap. For these students, poetry can become a gateway to other forms of writing. It can help teach skills that come in handy with other kinds of writing—like precise, economical diction, for example. When Carl Sandburg writes, “The fog comes/on little cat feet,” in just six words, he endows a natural phenomenon with character, a pace, and a spirit. All forms of writing benefits from the powerful and concise phrases found in poems.I have used cut-up poetry (a variation on the sort “popularized” by William Burroughs and Brion Gysin) to teach 9th grade students, most of whom learned English as a second language, about grammar and literary devices. They made collages after slicing up dozens of “sources,” identifying the adjectives and adverbs, utilizing parallel structure, alliteration, assonance, and other figures of speech. Short poems make a complete textual analysis more manageable for English language learners. When teaching students to read and evaluate every single word of a text, it makes sense to demonstrate the practice with a brief poem—like Gwendolyn Brooks’s “We Real Cool.”Students can learn how to utilize grammar in their own writing by studying how poets do—and do not—abide by traditional writing rules in their work. Poetry can teach writing and grammar conventions by showing what happens when poets strip them away or pervert them for effect. Dickinson often capitalizes common nouns and uses dashes instead of commas to note sudden shifts in focus. Agee uses colons to create dramatic, speech-like pauses. Cummings of course rebels completely. He usually eschews capitalization in his proto-text message poetry, wrapping frequent asides in parentheses and leaving last lines dangling on their pages, period-less. In “next to of course god america i,” Cummings strings together, in the first 13 lines, a cavalcade of jingoistic catch-phrases a politician might utter, and the lack of punctuation slowing down and organizing the assault accentuates their unintelligibility and banality and heightens the satire. The abuse of conventions helps make the point. In class, it can help a teacher explain the exhausting effect of run-on sentences—or illustrate how clichés weaken an argument.

The point of reading a poem is not to try to “solve” it. Still, that quantifiable process of demystification is precisely what teachers are encouraged to teach students, often in lieu of curating a powerful experience through literature. The literature itself becomes secondary, boiled down to its Cliff’s Notes demi-glace. I haven’t wanted to risk that with the poems that enchanted me in my youth.

Teachers should produce literature lovers as well as keen critics, striking a balance between teaching writing, grammar, and analytical strategies and then also helping students to see that literature should be mystifying. It should resist easy interpretation and beg for return visits. Poetry serves this purpose perfectly. I am confident my 12th graders know how to write essays. I know they can mine a text for subtle messages. But I worry sometimes if they’ve learned this lesson. In May, a month before they graduate, I may read some poetry with my seniors—to drive home that and nothing more.

We want to hear what you think about this article. Submit a letter to the editor or write to letters [at] theatlantic [dot] com.

ANDREW SIMMONS is a writer, teacher, and musician based in California. He has written for The New York TimesSlate, and The Believer. His site is adlsimmons.com.

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Look outside schools and help low-income families

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Want to boost test scores and increase grad rates? One strategy: look outside schools and help low-income families

Children at Detroit's Fit and Fold laundromat now have computers to use and books to read while their parents do the wash — part of an effort to bring literacy programs to places where families are.
Children at Detroit’s Fit and Fold laundromat now have computers to use and books to read while their parents do the wash — part of an effort to bring literacy programs to places where families are.
 Erin Einhorn

When Marquita, a Memphis mother of six, became homeless, her children began to struggle in school. “The kids were just out of control,” she said. “Their grades weren’t the same.”

“What people don’t understand is what adults go through, kids go through it too,” she said. “I didn’t know kids get depressed until I went through this situation.”

Marquita, who asked that her last name be withheld to discuss her living situation and her children’s mental health, said she became homeless because she was pushed out of her apartment when she filed a lawsuit about poor conditions. She wasn’t able to find and afford a new place immediately, so over the course of three months, she stayed with friends, rented hotel rooms, or slept in her car. Marquita washed clothes at her kids’ school, which had a washing machine.

“It was a journey,” she said.

Marquita eventually found a permanent place to live with the support of a local “rapid rehousing” program, which also paid her first six months of rent. It immediately made a difference for her kids.

“When I got in a house, their grades went back up, they weren’t getting in trouble,” she said. “It affects them in a major way.”

A large and growing body of research backs up Marquita’s experience, documenting not only that poverty hurts students in school, but that specific anti-poverty programs can counteract that harm. These programs — or other methods of increasing family income — boost students’ test scores, make them more likely to finish high school, and raise their chances of enrolling in college.

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In other words, many policies with a shot at changing the experience of low-income students in school don’t have anything to do with the schools themselves. That also means, as these findings pile up, they get relatively little attention from education policymakers who could be key advocates.

“We’re so compartmentalized when we think about kids,” said Greg Duncan, a professor at the University of California, Irvine who has researched the effects of anti-poverty programs. “For people who are interested in promoting well-being of children … these safety net programs should be very much on people’s mind.”

A steady stream of evidence

Chalkbeat identified more than 20 studies published in the past decade that examine how increasing family income or benefits, like food stamps and health insurance, affect children’s outcomes in school in the U.S. This research does not simply restate the well-known fact that less affluent children do worse in schools than more affluent ones; the studies try to pin down the effect of providing additional resources to families in poverty.

Over and over, they find that more money or benefits helps kids in school.

[Read the full list of studies that Chalkbeat has compiled.]

Take the latest study. It came out in July, and showed that teenagers whose families earned a tax credit for low-income families scored substantially higher on standardized tests and were more likely to graduate college. The gains were greatest for the poorest kids.

The effects of these programs are notable, but not huge. For instance, in that most recent study, an annual increase in family income of about $3,000 led to test score gains of a few percentile points. For older kids, it boosted high school and college graduation rates by 1 percentage point. That’s comparable to the effects of things like having a substantially better teacher or lowering class sizes.

This evidence doesn’t suggest that low-income kids can’t learn or that schools and teachers are unimportant to academic achievement. A large body of research shows otherwise. And, of course, many policymakers and educators have long been aware of the how out-of-school factors affects academics. Community schools and trauma-informed teaching are two efforts to address that.

But the research on anti-poverty programs illustrates how much changes to family income, affected by programs unrelated to schools, can help students do better in class.

Child poverty has fallen since the 1990s — mostly due to government benefit programs — but large racial disparities persist. Black children are three times as likely to grow up in poverty as white children, meaning some groups of kids are experiencing consequences of poverty in school much more than others.

Studies show trend, but also come with key caveats

The results aren’t all that surprising, considering the documented effects of poverty and stress on children’s brain development.

“Additional income, especially if it’s regularly received, enables parents to avoid evictions and utilities cut-offs and all the disruptions that can happen,” Duncan said.

Chalkbeat’s review focuses on relatively recent U.S. research, but studies from 1979 and 1984 have also shown positive effects. They seem consistent with what’s been found in other countries, too, and with detailed reviews of past studies by researchers.

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But the research also comes with important limits.

These studies point in a clear direction, but there are exceptions. A handful of studies find no clear effects, particularly of government housing programs.

Second, each study focuses on specific programs, and some focus on much older initiatives. The breadth of the results is telling, but they can’t definitively tell us exactly what would happen now if new programs were created or existing ones expanded.

Finally, the studies generally don’t say much about trade-offs. What are the costs — perhaps higher taxes — of expanding such initiatives? Might other programs be a better use of scarce dollars? They also don’t tell us anything about bigger philosophical debates surrounding anti-poverty programs, or about the value of making sure people have adequate food and housing.

With all that in mind, let’s dig into the research.

More money means fewer problems in school

One widely used anti-poverty program is the Earned Income Tax Credit, and it’s been repeatedly linked to better schooling outcomes for kids. The IRS said that 27 million families used the program in 2017.

The program can make a big difference for low-income working families. For instance, a parent of two who earns $15,000 gets an additional $5,700 in benefits through that tax credit. In 2016, the average credit for a family with children was just over $3,000. It has also been shown to boost families’ earning by encouraging work.

At least two studies have examined how the program affects test scores by looking at what happened when the earned income tax credit became more generous in the 1990s. In both, students — particularly children of color and boys — saw scores rise.

Programs that give tax credits to parents also seem to raise test scores, according to other research in both the U.S. and Canada.

The more recent earned income tax credit study found that it boosted high school and college graduation rates, particularly among the poorest kids.

“There is a positive effect of family income on test scores and on educational outcomes — and this doesn’t just fade out,” said Jacob Bastian, one of the study’s authors and an economist at the University of Chicago.

He said it makes sense that the biggest beneficiaries were kids whose families were the lowest-income. “If you give a middle class family three thousand more dollars maybe it’s not a big deal, but if you give a poor family three thousand more dollars, then that’s going to have a big effect,” he said.

Another study, by Duncan and others, looked at anti-poverty programs in the 1990s that offered additional money to people who worked. Income tied to those programs, it found, also led to higher test scores for kids.

A 2010 study suggests that work incentives aren’t necessary to see gains. It looked at what happened when Native American families received a large and unexpected boost in income due to profits from a new nearby casino being distributed to those families with no strings attached.

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