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Reading Recovery in the News - January-March 2007
JANUARY, 2007
Program helps poorest first-grade readers
Community Press - Florence, KY
By Danny Cross
January 28, 2007
Marcie Patrick began this school year with four students in her
Reading Recovery program, a professional development system
dedicated to helping the lowest 20 percent of a first-grade reading
class catch up to class reading standards.
Her current students - two of which have completely caught up to
class standards and two who have made considerable progress - will
rejoin their normal classes and she'll take on four new students,
Patrick said.
The program, which William Bick Primary instituted last year, is
an intensive 20-week course for first graders which offers each
student one-on-one teaching for 30 minutes a day, five days a week.
Patrick said the students who begin falling behind during first
grade will only fall further behind without help.
"I think that this is just one more way that our school board is
really trying to hit those students that are struggling," said
Patrick. "We earned an excellent school rating last year and I think
it's all of these endeavors that help."
PROFILE: 8 questions with Donna McGrady
thepaper24-7.com – Montgomery County, IN
By Denise Hinckley
January 27, 2007
Each day The Paper of Montgomery County profiles a person from
our community...
A retired teacher and assistant superintendent, Donna McGrady
stays busy on the Waynetown Town Council, she is the president of
the board for both the Montgomery County Historical Society and the
crisis shelter in Crawfordsville.
If you could have dinner with any three people (living or dead),
who would they be and why?
….Marie Clay is a person I would like to meet. She started the
'Reading Recovery' program that we use in this country.
FEBRUARY 2007
Pupil’s Elective Classes at Risk
The Express Times - Easton, PA
By Kurt Bresswein
February 13, 2007
Bethlehem Area School District high school students who fall
behind in reading may have to give up elective courses for a new
remediation program proposed Monday….
Other reading remediation courses called Reading Recovery for
first-graders and Read 180 for grades three and four and the middle
schools have made notable progress in improving literacy, according
to literacy coordinator Kathy Bast and K-5 Literacy Coordinator
Joanne LoFaso.
Test looms over BASD
Allentown Morning Call - Allentown, PA
By Steve Esack
February 13, 2007
In other reading matters, literacy coordinator Joanne LoFaso said
a first-grade reading refresher course, Reading Recovery, has had
great results. She had stats too.
After the meeting, Villani said students come to the district
without basic reading skills. Reading starts at home, he said.
''The parents are either plopping them down in front of the
television or the parents work and cannot find the time,'' Villani
said. ''It all comes down to how much instruction time they have at
home with reading.
The quintessential teacher
Turlock Journal – Turlock, CA
By DENNIS WYATT
Wednesday, February 14, 2007
Turlock paid tribute Saturday to Sandra Tovar Medeiros. Family,
friends, and fellow educators gathered for the symbolic laying by
the Masons of the cornerstone for Sandra Tovar Medeiros Elementary
School.
Medeiros patiently devoted 15 years of her life at Wakefield
Elementary laying the foundation necessary for hundreds of young
minds to blossom. Medeiros was a kindergarten teacher and a Reading
Recovery teacher.
Medeiros knew well why reading was essential and the foundation to
learning and success in life. The daughter of field workers,
Medeiros could not read English and spoke very little when she
started school. Somewhere along the way she came across a teacher at
an early age who helped her unlock that great mystery of reading.
And in doing so, the floodgates were opened.
MARCH 2007
MV board commends students
Mount Vernon News - Mount Vernon, OH
By Pamela Schehl
March 6, 2007
MOUNT VERNON — Awards and commendations led off Monday’s meeting
of the Mount Vernon Board of Education. The board first commended
Columbia Elementary students Heather Tharp and Erica Wilcox for
placing in the national Reading Recovery art contest. Heather was a
regional winner, Erica one of 12 national winners. Her artwork is
featured on note cards distributed by the national organization.
An awesome twosome: First-grader hones reading skills with help
of principal
Amherst Bulletin - Amherst, MA
By Bob Dunn
March 9, 2007
It's not every first-grader who asks to spend time in the
principal's office. But that's what 6-year-old Alex Martinez did
when he sent a note to Crocker Farm Principal Paul Wiley.
The note read, "Dear Mr. Wiley, can I read with you some day?" It
listed two boxes labeled "yes" and "no."
Wiley checked "yes."
Alex is part of Crocker Farm's Reading Recovery program, which
identifies students who may be at risk for falling behind classmates
in their reading abilities.
"Some children don't have special needs, they just need special
instruction," said Janine Kelly, who teaches Reading Recovery at
Crocker Farm and works with Alex for 30 minutes each school day.
Reading Recovery Begins at RE-1 Elementary Schools
Journal-Advocate - Sterling, CO
By Carol Barrett
March 10, 2007
STERLING — Being a capable reader makes school better for a child
in so many ways. It raises self-esteem, opens doors to learning
other subjects, and when reading comes easily, it can be lots of
fun, too.
To this end, the RE-1 Valley School District is implementing
Reading Recovery this year at Stevens and Caliche elementary
schools. The Reading Recovery program is designed to significantly
reduce the number of children who have reading difficulties in first
grade.
All the RE-1 first-grade pupils in Sterling attend Stevens School
this year, where three specially-trained teachers work with the
children who are having the most difficulty learning to read.
Caliche School has one Reading Recovery teacher for the
first-graders who need the extra help.
Ron Marostica, assistant superintendent at RE-1, became familiar
with the program when he worked at schools in other states and was
impressed with the results. The idea, he said, is to help children
who are having reading difficulties “recover,” before they become
defeated. The children recommended for Reading Recovery are the
lowest readers in the first grade who don’t qualify for the Title I
Reading or Special Education programs.
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