Entries from October 1, 2013 - October 31, 2013

Monday
Oct 07 2013

Good Reading Comprehension Helps Math and Science Performance

What matters in our schools?

Most Americans think of reading and writing, mathematics, and science as the foundations of a quality education. What many fail to consider, however, is the importance of reading. Without strong reading comprehension skills, most students struggle with all the other subjects.

Educational excellence

Consider a recent article by Catherine Gewertz, " What High-Scoring Countries Do Right in Math, Reading, reading comprehension for science and Science ." In the article, posted on Education Week's "Curriculum Matters" blog, Ms. Gewertz cites newly released figures compiled by Boston College that measure the math, science, and reading scores of students worldwide. The study also provides a profile of which educational practices the highest-scoring countries have in common. Boston College calls these practices a "culture of educational excellence."

Results of the study

The researchers at Boston College started with data from 34 countries, focusing on the fourth-grade level. They narrowed the field by looking at the countries that had achieved the highest level of basic proficiency among their fourth graders. Using this criteria, the researchers identified five top-scoring countries: Finland, Taipei, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Russia. While each of these countries had its own educational strengths and weaknesses, one factor stood out: when teachers worked to improve reading comprehension, student test scores rose across the board. Scores in math and science rose along with those in reading literacy.

What this means for American schools

It's easy to see why a good reading program is essential to student achievement. Consider the following fourth-grade story problem:

Grandma is coming to visit. She's flying from San Francisco CA to Morristown NJ. That's 2,885 miles! If the flight takes five hours, how fast does the plane go?

If a child can't understand the simple sentences above, he can't even begin to approach the math involved. By concentrating on reading comprehension, educators in the U.S. will increase student achievement in every other area.

What this means for YOU

To help your child perform better at math word problems and science, make sure he reads well.  For more information how Think Tutoring's reading programs can help the struggling reader, contact us at 973-593-0050.

Thursday
Oct 03 2013

Improve Reading With Spelling Games

improve reading Spelling ability is crucial to your child's reading ability. Five games  improve reading  and reinforce spelling words.

1. Hopscotch

Draw a hopscotch outline with chalk or tape and write the letters of a spelling word in the squares. Your child says the letters out loud as he hops. Erase one letter at a time until he can successfully spell the word without hopping, and then move onto the next spelling word.

2. Ball Toss

Toss a ball back and forth to reinforce spelling in a fun way. Each time your child catches the ball, she says the next letter of the spelling word.

3 . Hide and Seek

Write the spelling words on note cards, and tape them in unusual places, such as on the back of cabinet doors, in your child's closet or in her pencil or jewelry box. When she finds a word, she brings the card to you and spells the word.

4. Memory Reading Game

Have your child write his spelling words onto two identical sets of note cards. Place them upside down on the table and take turns trying to find matches. He reads and spells every matched word. Cover one or two of the letters and play the game again.

5. Spelling City

A free online game site, you enter the spelling words onto a list your child can practice every day. Hangman, memory and matching games entertain and teach your child, and a test at the end ensures she has mastered every word on the list.

All five games are fun ways your child can improve his or her spelling at home, school or with a reading tutor.  Think Tutoring has comprehensive reading programs serving Morris County, NJ students .   For more information on how to hlep your child with spelling and reading, call 973-593-0050.

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