Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone summarize the pros or cons for this new English curriculum?
Not that DCUM cares much about this, but this curriculum does not meet all the language learning needs of English learners. So EDL teachers will, once again, be developing and using their own curriculum.
Which curriculum meets all the language learning needs of all English learners?
You need phonics (which the new curriculum has) and a curriculum such as National Geographic/Cengage Time Zones:
https://ngl.cengage.com/search/productOverview.do?N=201+4294891824+4294918606&Ntk=P_EPI&Ntt=2018652554124969321720200217060222991&Ntx=mode%2Bmatchallpartial&homePage=false
English Learners need a specific curriculum for English similar to what native English speakers utilized when learning French, Spanish, etc.
The CKLA curriculum has ELD support and comes in Spanish.
https://go.info.amplify.com/language-studio-ckla
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone summarize the pros or cons for this new English curriculum?
Not that DCUM cares much about this, but this curriculum does not meet all the language learning needs of English learners. So EDL teachers will, once again, be developing and using their own curriculum.
Which curriculum meets all the language learning needs of all English learners?
You need phonics (which the new curriculum has) and a curriculum such as National Geographic/Cengage Time Zones:
https://ngl.cengage.com/search/productOverview.do?N=201+4294891824+4294918606&Ntk=P_EPI&Ntt=2018652554124969321720200217060222991&Ntx=mode%2Bmatchallpartial&homePage=false
English Learners need a specific curriculum for English similar to what native English speakers utilized when learning French, Spanish, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone summarize the pros or cons for this new English curriculum?
Not that DCUM cares much about this, but this curriculum does not meet all the language learning needs of English learners. So EDL teachers will, once again, be developing and using their own curriculum.
Which curriculum meets all the language learning needs of all English learners?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone summarize the pros or cons for this new English curriculum?
Not that DCUM cares much about this, but this curriculum does not meet all the language learning needs of English learners. So EDL teachers will, once again, be developing and using their own curriculum.
Anonymous wrote:Maryland should really focus on Math, not Reading. The Math scores are atrocious.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone summarize the pros or cons for this new English curriculum?
Anonymous wrote:Where is the draft policy?! The article only has the link to the survey.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have been telling people for years how embarrassing it is for Maryland, and specifically MCPS, to be so far behind in reading compared to states like Mississippi and Alabama. Glad our new state superintendent is known as the Mississippi Miracle and is bringing the science of reading to Maryland. This is long overdue!
Well, you've been telling them wrong. No wonder they have not been paying attention to you.
How is it wrong? Other states have figured out how to successfully teach ALL students to read by using methods proven by science since the Vietnam era except for Maryland.
Umm what. Plenty of states and districts had been wrongly doing balanced literacy. And if with implementing Science of reading that it still only one piece of Balanced Literacy.
“Balanced Literacy” is that Lucy Calkins crap. it has repeatedly been shown to be ineffective in multiple studies. Thank God we are doing Science of Reading instead of BL.
No. Balanced Literacy was turned into the Lucy Calkins. Balanced literacy should always have included phonics for teaching kids to read. It should also include a balance amount ans appropriate of all the components of literacy(reading, grammar, spelling, comprehension, analysis, verbal and written expression).
Your description of BL matches Lycy Calkins - a little if this, a little of that, including a lot of stuff that doesn't work.
What was named that doesn’t work? Kids need to be taught phonics in order to read. The need to learn all phonemes in order to be able to spell. The need to be taught root word and affixes in order to spell bigger words and be able to ascertain meanings of words they don’t know, which then allows for comprehension and context. They need grammar and punctuation in order to express themselves coherently. If you don’t want all of the above taught to your kid in a balanced way then that would explain the illiteracy rate is this country.
None of what you describe is explicitly taught in BL/Lucy Calkins methods. If you have a kid in MCPS you know they haven’t taught spelling in many, many years. They don’t even teach handwriting anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have been telling people for years how embarrassing it is for Maryland, and specifically MCPS, to be so far behind in reading compared to states like Mississippi and Alabama. Glad our new state superintendent is known as the Mississippi Miracle and is bringing the science of reading to Maryland. This is long overdue!
Well, you've been telling them wrong. No wonder they have not been paying attention to you.
How is it wrong? Other states have figured out how to successfully teach ALL students to read by using methods proven by science since the Vietnam era except for Maryland.
Umm what. Plenty of states and districts had been wrongly doing balanced literacy. And if with implementing Science of reading that it still only one piece of Balanced Literacy.
“Balanced Literacy” is that Lucy Calkins crap. it has repeatedly been shown to be ineffective in multiple studies. Thank God we are doing Science of Reading instead of BL.
No. Balanced Literacy was turned into the Lucy Calkins. Balanced literacy should always have included phonics for teaching kids to read. It should also include a balance amount ans appropriate of all the components of literacy(reading, grammar, spelling, comprehension, analysis, verbal and written expression).
Your description of BL matches Lycy Calkins - a little if this, a little of that, including a lot of stuff that doesn't work.
What was named that doesn’t work? Kids need to be taught phonics in order to read. The need to learn all phonemes in order to be able to spell. The need to be taught root word and affixes in order to spell bigger words and be able to ascertain meanings of words they don’t know, which then allows for comprehension and context. They need grammar and punctuation in order to express themselves coherently. If you don’t want all of the above taught to your kid in a balanced way then that would explain the illiteracy rate is this country.
None of what you describe is explicitly taught in BL/Lucy Calkins methods. If you have a kid in MCPS you know they haven’t taught spelling in many, many years. They don’t even teach handwriting anymore.