Is any reading good reading? Or is it dumbing down the student?

Is any reading good reading?

BOOKWORM: Teachers are using different reading materials to encourage young people to read.

BOOKWORM: Teachers are using different reading materials to encourage young people to read.

Here’s some news that will ease the minds of parents of even the most reluctant readers.

If your child refuses to pick up a book, don’t despair. Teachers and parents are increasingly using comic books, magazines, TV, websites and even video games and text messages to nurture a love of words in children.

The message is simple: any reading is good reading, said Kathy Ferrari, a primary school teacher and North Sydney branch president of the Australian Literacy Educators’ Association.

“I very much believe that a wide range of material is best and anything that gets kids reading is fantastic,” she said.

Comic books and their sophisticated cousin, graphic novels, are now regularly being deployed in classrooms. No longer seen as shallow, they are valued as a way to engage children and teach another form of visual literacy. They are also an introduction to the classics, with many great works of literature, including those by Shakespeare, now published as comics.

“It’s wonderful to do one in a classroom, to do the comparisons of the way different texts are published,” Ferrari said.

She also embraces magazines as a great tool, with their variety of topics and mix of fiction and non-fiction, images and words. “I would never recommend a sole diet of that but if that’s all they are reading, it’s better than nothing.”

Karen Brooks, an author and associate professor of media studies at Southern Cross University, said the rapid spread of technology should not be seen as the enemy of literacy.

“It [technology] is a gift,” she said. “Never before have we had so much at our fingertips to both educate and challenge our difficult readers but also our more sophisticated readers.”

The problem is those reluctant readers. Just as there will always be children who devour Austen and Tolkien from an early age, there will always be a group who struggle with books, and they are predominantly young boys.

Literacy testing reveals the divide. A University of Canberra report, Boys, Blokes and Books, cites 2009 NAPLAN results: 89.6 per cent of year 5 boys performed at or above the national minimum standard compared with 93.9 per cent of girls at the same age. In year 7, the gap between girls and boys was 6.4 per cent.

One issue is the relevance of classroom texts for boys who prefer biographies to fiction, fantasy to poetry.

For their paper What Do Australian Boys Think About Reading?, University of Sydney researchers Maxine Broughton and Jacqueline Manuel interviewed 30 boys from a NSW high school. They found teachers failed to engage the students by not basing reading on the boys’ preferred topics and genres.

Brooks says this is where technology comes in. Non-readers might start with text messages to familiarise themselves with the written word, read websites about their favourite TV shows or write a short review of a video game.

“It forms a bridge and it allows them to cross that bridge,” she said. “As they learn the wonder and the surprises and joys of words, then you transition them into books.”

Leonie Tyle is exploring the potential of e-readers, such as the iPad, after 25 years as a librarian and children’s publisher. She says e-books up the interactive factor, with moving and talking characters, while still offering the crucial parent-child experience. They can also be used by students to share thoughts on books with real classmates, or virtual ones further afield.

“I think this generation is so attuned to games, television, computers, social networking … kids who aren’t readers are more likely to pick up an e-reader and read a book,” Tyle said.

Interactive Press, which has published nearly 100 titles digitally, will soon release About Face, a book by Adelaide author Robert Moore. Conceived about 25 years ago, the story about a child who dreams his facial features run away from his face failed initially to win publishers’ favour. But Moore teamed up with Adelaide animation studio Monkeystack, and About Face is now due to be published, accompanied by iPad and iPhone applications.

“Maybe I had to bide my time. All of this [technology] is out there happening … and we can’t resist it,” Moore said.

– Sydney Morning Herald

http://www.stuff.co.nz/life-style/wellbeing/4595708/Is-any-reading-good-reading

World Vision resources

World Vision resources

Email from Don Benn of World Vision

Hello,

My name is Don Benn and I am a Schools Relationship Coordinator with World Vision.  In addition to schools we also try to engage with students in various other groups – including churches, non-church groups, and home school groups.  I have personally connected with a couple of home school groups in the last year and thought it would be good to approach you regarding our resources.  I wonder if it would be appropriate for you to make these resources known to those involved in Home Schooling in New Zealand.  I have outlined below, with a brief detail, some of the resources we offer.  If you would like more information on them please reply and I would love to follow up on them.

1.     GLC (Global Leadership Convention).  This is a student leader (Year 11-13) leadership training day aimed at empowering and inspiring young leaders who are hungry to influence their world.  They are encouraged to think globally and are equipped with practical leadership skills.

2.    40 Hour Famine.  This is a practical way for students to act on global issues.  They are part of a national fundraiser which last year raised over $2.4 million, involving over 120,000 people in New Zealand.  It is also something which can be incorporated into learning as a practical component of a unit relating to food and hunger – for example.

3.     Education Resources.  World Vision has education writers who produce resources (resource folders, DVD’s, posters, textbooks, worksheets, simulation games) on issues like water, food, child labour, HIV & AIDS, Disasters, Conflict, and various case studies.  These resources can be found on our website (http://www.worldvision.org.nz/education/default.aspx).  In addition we have Schools Relationship Coordinators based in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch who are more than willing to show you samples of those resources.

4.     Smiles.  Smiles is a catalogue of gifts that can be purchased for people in poorer nations.  It ranges from $5 items up to $1300, and covers gifts relating to water, food, shelter, hygiene, education.  It is a great practical way to finish a unit of work which relates to one of these topics.  Learning about a topic is great, and the opportunity for students to feel like they have been able to do something about what they have learned is like icing on the cake.

I would love to hear from you and see how World Vision can complement the learning already being done in home school groups around New Zealand.

Donald Benn
Schools Relationship Coordinator
Follow us on
www.worldvision.org.nz
Mobile: +64 21 0200 9200
DDI: +64 9 580 7700
Fax: +64 9 580 7799

2011 school terms and holidays

2011 school terms and holidays

School terms and holidays for 2011 for state and state-integrated primary, intermediate, secondary and composite schools. It also provides Anniversary Day holidays for 2011.

2011 term dates

From the MOE website

Differences for 2011

  • The usual length of each school term has been adjusted for 2011. Terms 1 and 2 are slightly longer than usual, and Term 4 is two weeks shorter. This adjustment has been made to align the October term holiday with the final stages of the 2011 Rugby World Cup tournament.
  • The earliest start date for 2011 has been amended. The earliest date on which schools may open in 2011 is Monday 31 January (rather than Tuesday 1 February, as previously).

Primary and intermediate schools

This table shows term start and end dates schools must use.

Term Start date End date
1 Between Monday 31 January (at the earliest) and Monday 7 February (at the latest) Friday 15 April (100 to 110 half-days)
2 Monday 2 May Friday 15 July (108 half-days)
3 Monday 1 August Friday 7 October (100 half-days)
4 Tuesday 25 October No later than Tuesday 20 December (82 half-days)*

* Or to a day in December which ensures that the school has been open for instruction for 390 half-days in 2011.

Secondary and composite schools

This table shows term start and end dates schools must use.

Term Start date End date
1 Between Monday 31 January (at the earliest) and Monday 7 February (at the latest) Friday 15 April (100 to 110 half-days)
2 Monday 2 May Friday 15 July (108 half-days)
3 Monday 1 August Friday 7 October (100 half-days)
4 Tuesday 25 October No later than Tuesday 13 December (72 half-days)*

* Or to a day in December which ensures that the school has been open for instruction for 380 half-days in 2011.

2011 holidays

Schools must be closed in 2011 on Saturdays and Sundays, and on these days:

  • New Years Day – 1 January
  • Day after New Years Day – 2 January
  • Waitangi Day – 6 February (Sunday)
  • Good Friday – 22 April
  • Easter Monday – 25 April
  • Day after Easter Monday – 26 April (Tuesday)
  • Anzac Day – 25 April
  • Queen’s Birthday – 6 June (Monday)
  • Labour Day – 24 October (Monday)
  • Christmas Day – 25 December
  • Boxing Day – 26 December

And the relevant Anniversary Day holiday as below.

Anniversary Day holidays 2011

Location Day and date Occurs within
Auckland Monday 31 January school holidays
Taranaki Monday 14 March Term 1
Hawkes Bay Friday 21 October school holidays
Wellington Monday 24 January school holidays
Marlborough Monday 31 October Term 4
Nelson Monday 31 January school holidays
Canterbury Friday 11 November Term 4
Canterbury (South) Monday 26 September Term 3
Westland Monday 5 December Term 4
Otago Monday 21 March Term 1
Southland Monday 17 January school holidays
Chatham Islands Monday 28 November Term 4

The Excellent Wife: A Biblical Perspective, Expanded Edition(10th Anniv. Ed.) by Martha Peace

The Excellent Wife

A Biblical Perspective, Expanded Edition(10th Anniv. Ed.)

by Martha Peace

Click on photo for a larger image

Who is an excellent wife? What is she like? Using the woman in Proverbs 31 as a model, trusted Christian counselor Martha Peace offers detailed practical answers to questions most often asked by Christian wives. Her proven principles and scripturally based insights will encourage you to become the wife God wants you to be. This is a must-read for every Christian wife.

  • Publisher: Focus Publishing, Incorporated; Revised edition (2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-1-885904-08-8

“The Excellent Wife” (10th Anniv. Ed.) contains a 48 page addendum that answers several questions received by Martha and additional counseling examples and applications. Included are the salvation worksheets she developed and a “Question and Answer” section and: “The Put Off, Put On Dynamic,” women’s role in the church, “The Biblical View of Authority,” “Examples of Not Answering a Fool According to His Folly,” “Loneliness,” “Eleven Misperceptions on Biblical Submission,  and “Advice for Women Married to Unbelievers,” All this is in addition to the detailed, practical portrait of a godly wife of the entire original book. It is thoroughly biblical, very convicting, and clearly answers the tough questions others avoid. It is usable for individual study.

 

Click on photo for a larger image

This book is a systematic and practical work for today’s women. Within its pages is a detailed portrait of a Godly wife. Not only is the standard high and holy, but Martha Peace demonstrates that by God’s grace, it is attainable.

NZD$22.00

For more information on Nouthetic Studies http://www.nouthetic.org.nz/

To order do one of the following:

send email to sales@hef.org.nz with visa number

post cheque or visa number to PO Box 9064, Palmerston North

fax: 06 357-4389

phone: 06 357-4399

Trademe (fees added):  http://www.trademe.co.nz/Members/Listings.aspx?member=3684863

Sella (No added fees):  http://www.sella.co.nz/store/4ym9qg/home-education-foundation/display-100/