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Monday, March 27, 2023
Tuesday, March 21, 2023
Henrietta Hedgehog's Prickly Problem by Carole P. Roman
This book is a wonderful read for children. Yes, it's a teaching moment. Henrietta isn't sure about herself. She's learning though. There were several of her new friends telling her they'd help her hide her quills.
I didn't find any issues.
I gave this one 4 cheers out of 5 because it's a fantastic book.
Wednesday, March 1, 2023
Death by Pins and Needles by Susie Black
- Swimsuit companies gather to show the newest colors and designs. The last thing anyone expects is to find a dead body. What ensues is a race to find the killer and gain the release of innocent people. The designers begin talking about the situation and trying to put some of the clues out there. Will they find the killer before they strike again?
Michigan Senate dumps ‘read or flunk’ portion of third-grade law
- The ‘read or flunk’ provision approved in 2016 sought to improve reading and accountability
- But there were so many exceptions, few students were held back and Democrats say mandate didn’t work
- Bill now heads to state House
LANSING — The Michigan Senate voted Wednesday to dismantle a controversial law requiring students to repeat the third grade if they’re behind in reading skills.
In a 22-16 vote, senators moved to repeal requirement that third graders who’ve fallen a year or more behind on state standards for reading comprehension be held back instead of advancing to fourth grade.
The “read or flunk” provision approved as part of a 2016 law signed by former Gov. Rick Snyder aimed at assisting struggling readers and improving accountability in schools.
Related:
- Michigan Senate panel removes flunking from third grade reading law
- Michigan Democrats’ big education priority: Reform or kill read-or-flunk law
- Black, poor students held back at higher rates under Michigan reading law
Democrats and education advocates have long argued the retention requirement should get tossed, pointing to studies claiming doing so hurt students psychologically, disproportionately impacted low-income and minority students and simply doesn’t work.
Repealing the provision was named a top priority by legislative Democrats after they won majorities in both legislative chambers last fall.
Senate Bill 12, does away with the retention policy, but keeps provisions outlining how schools assess students for reading skills and what interventions to provide. The bill requires the state to notify parents if their students have a reading deficiency that qualifies for state intervention in the fourth grade.
“It’s ineffective and out of touch education policy like this that led me to run for office,” said Sen. Dayna Polehanki, D-Livonia, a former teacher. “This bill will ensure our kids have the reading supports they need—and eliminate the punitive and problematic mandatory retention piece they don’t.”
Most Republicans voted against the measure, except Sens. Ruth Johnson, R-Holly, and Joe Bellino, R-Monroe.
Sen. John Damoose, R-Harbor Springs, argued that nixing the retention portion of the law is unwise, especially as students struggle to recover from learning loss after the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Now is not the time to weaken standards and accountability or to take tools out of our toolbox,” Damoose said.
The third-grade reading law was passed in 2016, but the retention component did not go into effect until students took standardized assessments in the 2020-2021 school year. That means the first group of students that were retained were in fall 2021.
The law allowed several exceptions, including whether they’d previously been held back or if the parent and superintendent agreed retention wasn’t in the child’s best interest.
Michigan State University researchers found that of the nearly 5,700 students eligible for retention this fall, only 545 students were held back. Researchers also found that Black students and those from low-income families are more than twice as likely to be held back compared to their white and higher-income peers.
The report found 13.6 percent of the Black students who were flagged were held back, while 5.7 percent of white students flagged repeated third grade. Similarly, 10.5 percent of eligible students from low-income families were held back, compared with 4.3 percent of students who are not from low-income families.
Both Democrats and Republicans have endorsed investing more heavily in reading tutors to help struggling students catch up by third grade.
Sen. Ed McBroom, R-Vulcan, said Tuesday he believed the passage of the initial third-grade reading law “was a real miscarriage of the legislative process” and usurped the work being done at the local level to intervene when kids were struggling with reading.
He urged lawmakers to “just scrap the whole thing” with a full repeal instead of prescribing a one-size-fits-all solution to school districts with varying needs.