All student activity on Raz - Kids is captured and reported to teachers online through the Kids A-Z Student Management hub — making it easy for you to track individual and class -
wide reading progress and determine future instruction needs.
Not exact matches
This 16 - page resource booklet contains a
wide range of challenging and engaging comprehension activities for use throughout the
reading of E.E. Cummings» poem «next to of course god america i.» They are perfect for aiding the
progress of students learning poetry either in KS3 and KS4 in preparation for poetry / unseen poetry at GCSE, as the tasks draw on English Literature assessment objectives - suitable for all examining bodies - it is clearly highlighted within each task regarding which assessment strands the task is designed to demonstrate.
2001 brought passage of the No Child Left Behind Act, a momentous reauthorization of the ESEA, declaring not only that every single student should become «proficient» in math and
reading, but also that every school in the land would have its performance reported, both school
wide and for its student demographic subgroups, and that schools failing to make «adequate yearly
progress» would face a cascade of sanctions and interventions.
In the U.S., these gaps are particularly
wide in Algebra I and English I. Nationally, 33 percent of eighth - grade students performed at or above the Proficient level on 2015 National Assessment of Educational
Progress (NAEP) mathematics assessments; 34 percent performed at or above the same level on 2015 NAEP
reading assessments.
The urgency is certainly clear: The latest in a string of research showing stark educational inequities in America's schools, the 2017 National Assessment of Educational
Progress (NAEP) revealed that
wide gaps persist in
reading and math proficiency between white students and students of color.
She'd
read the book to a four - year - old «whose eyes grew
wider as the text
progressed, yet she never showed fear, only that rapt attention of wanting to know how the story would end...»