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Photos
by Jean-Claude Lejeune
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| Curry
School programs help new teachers learn the best methods for
teaching their pupils the joys of reading. |
March
27, 2003
By
Anne Bromley
Mother
Goose and Dr. Seuss make the list, of course, as do more recent
titles, like "Hunches in Bunches" and "Street Rhymes
Around the World."
They
are among recommended books in the Phonological Awareness Literacy
Screening program, a Curry
School of Education initiative that helps children learn the
basics of reading. Due to the strength of PALS and related programs,
Curry has earned a major role in implementing Reading First, a grant-based
initiative that is part of the 2001 federal legislation "No
Child Left Behind."
The
state of Virginia has received a Reading First grant of almost $17
million to boost youngsters reading skills especially
good news amid the gloom of recent budget cuts. Under the grant,
the Curry School will receive about $2.2 million a year for five
years to offer Virginia teachers advanced training on reading instruction
and to help evaluate their students progress.
The
state selects school districts to apply for Reading First funding
based on the percentage of students with low scores on the third-grade
Standards of Learning test in English. Previous federal and state
programs "have been rolling along under different names, but
there are more requirements [in Reading First], and schools are
being held accountable for their implementation," said Marcia
Invernizzi, a Curry professor who will oversee the assessment end
of the grant.
Of
the 21 states that have been awarded Reading First grants, Virginia
is the only one to work with a university to implement its program,
said Curry professor Mary Abouzeid, who directs Teaching Educators
McGuffey Practicums Off Grounds -- the outreach arm of the McGuffey
Reading Center. TEMPO, which began offering workshops in 1984, is
administered by U.Va.s School of Continuing and Professional
Studies at regional centers throughout the state.
As
required by the Reading First grant, TEMPO will provide Reading
Institutes for teachers. The institutes will call for an expansion
of TEMPO "a huge-scale effort," Abouzeid said.
This
summer, the Reading Institutes will be held for almost 1,000 kindergarten
and first-grade teachers in three locations -- Charlottesville,
Richmond and Hampton Roads. Enrollment will increase to as many
as 4,000 during each of the next four summers and include second-
and third-grade teachers. Special education teachers, principals
and other administrators also are encouraged to attend the reading
workshop, said Abouzeid.
Assessment
of the grants success requires participating schools to use
PALS as a way of charting pupils progress in learning to read
and assessing where they are having problems.
Teachers
who go to the Reading Institute will have more tools to help their
students improve. In this way, the Reading First initiative aims
to evaluate how teachers professional development influences
childrens learning.
"Targeting
teacher knowledge is the missing piece" in improving literacy,
Invernizzi said.
For
more information, see the Web sites: http://curry.edschool.virginia.edu/go/pals
and http://curry.edschool.virginia.edu/go/
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