For example, students who do not
read over the summer months can lose the skills...
Your gift supports the only city - wide effort designed to keep children
reading over the summer months in the Super Reader Summer Reading Program.
Majorities of both low - income (69 %) and higher income (73 %) families reported that they want their children to keep
reading over the summer months.
Auryn, the most award - winning children's ebook publisher and the brain child of Academy award - winning visual effects designers, ahs launched four new titles, just in time to grab students» attention and engage them in self - selected
reading over the summer months.
Maggie McGuire, vice president of Parents and Kids channels for Scholastic, spoke to GoodEReader about not only the need to keep up with
reading over the summer months, but also ways to foster the importance of reading for kids.
Not exact matches
And 150 years ago, seems like it was a tough
summer in London because [the] Thames, well let me just
read what we wrote in June of 1860: «Last year during three
months of very dry weather, old father Thames, that once - classic stream, became a huge sewer sending forth fetid odors
over all the British metropolis.
In just a little
over a
month I will head to St. Louis to officially begin planning this
summer's semester... [Continue
Reading]
Each
summer most youth lose about two
months» worth of math skills, while low - income students also lose morethan two
months in
reading achievement despite the fact that their middle - class peers make slight gains
over the
summer break.
Research shows that low - income children can lose two
months or more of
reading skills
over the
summer.
Over a few
months starting in the
summer of 2009, as governors and schools chiefs sought the input of their school boards, Coleman, Zimba and other experts worked on
reading and math committees to actually write the standards.
Students who don't
read over the
summer can potentially lose more than two
months of
reading achievement?
Without working with your child,
reading skills can slip
over the
summer months, especially in elementary school children.
With many students losing two to three
months of progress in
reading and math skills
over summer, it's necessary to offer stimulating outings that are fun and academic.
You may have heard about «
summer slide», where
over the
summer students can lose two to three
months of progress in math and
reading and fall behind when they return to school in the fall.
Children who do not
read over the
summer can potentially lose more than two
months of
reading achievement, and unfortunately
summer reading loss is cumulative.
Keeping students engaged with
reading and literacy activities
over the
summer months can help maintain their academic edge and mitigate learning loss.
Over the
summer months, more than 37 % of tablet owners
read a newspaper at least once, with more than 11 % of those consumers
reading a digital newspaper on their devices every day; 39.6 % of tablet owners
read a digital magazine on their devices at least once during that same time frame.
Parents and teachers fret
over the
summer months about the potential for the «
summer slide,» a documented drop in
reading comprehension and word recognition scores in students who spend their
summer vacations without the daily
reading time they are accustomed to in school.
Tamblyn pointed to both the affordability and the increased portability of device
reading, as more and more parents support the ability to offer their children their entire libraries of books to choose from while on the go
over the
summer months.
Scholastic, the world's largest publisher of children's books, has been working on increasing student
reading interest
over the
summer months with its
reading challenges, aimed at encouraging students to meet or exceed goals outlined for them.
Research studies have long recognized that children who do not participate in an organized
summer reading program actually lose their hard won
reading skills
over the
summer — sliding back about 3
months in their skills by the time school resumes.
With research finding that children who do not
read over the
summer may lose up to three
months of
reading progress, it's important to encourage your students to pick up a few books during the hot
months ahead.
A free, online
reading program designed to help students turn the «
summer slide» — the learning loss which can occur
over the
summer months — into a «
summer leap» by discovering the power and joy of
reading for fun.
When we flicked the switch in the
summer of 2009, after
months of hard work, the web site already contained a wealth of stock market information and advice —
over 2,000...
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She had to
read (with my help) 10 books
over the
summer months.