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woodcut style illustration of the national capitol building

Time to Learn: Benefits of a Longer School Day

In this excerpt from the book Time to Learn: How a New School Schedule Is Making Smarter Kids, Happier Parents & Safer Neighborhoods, the authors discuss how a longer school day can support achievement in reading and math while providing a richer, broader curriculum. The book discusses extended day success stories in public schools throughout the country, the impact on teachers and families, and benefits for English language learners and children with learning disabilities.
Your Home as a Learning Experience

Your Home as a Learning Experience

For young children, their home is the best place to begin learning about math, science, and social studies, build early reading and writing skills, and to stretch their creativity. Get practical tips on how to look at your home through the lens of “learning through experiences.” You’ll also find ways to connect learning from school-to-home and home-to-school.

Elementary boy using tablet in class

Dyslexia: Beyond the Myth

This article describes the most common characterists of dyslexia and other learning disorders, and what you can do if you suspect your child has a problem.
Young girl looking at camera with blackboard full of science chalk drawings behind her

STEM Activities

Parent tips for easy and fun activities to do with your child that encourage STEM learning. Part of our Growing Readers series.

Creating Bar Graphs

Creating Bar Graphs

Real-life scientists use charts and graphs as a way to organize and understand the information they have gathered. Young scientists can do the same! These activities will help you and your child create simple bar charts together, learn the vocabulary of graphing, and have fun building graphs using real objects.

Diverse group of kids learning about bees and honey in elementary classroom

Tackling Achievement Gaps From Summer Learning Loss

A Rand study indicates that well-designed summer programs can help low-income students read and do math better. The key to academic gains in summer programs are steady attendance and a high-quality program with engaging, fun activities for school children and highly effective teachers teaching for at least three hours a day.

colorful map of path from beginning to end

Story Sequence

The ability to recall and retell the sequence of events in a text helps students identify main narrative components, understand text structure, and summarize — all key components of comprehension. 

two young elementary students having a lively conversation in class

Think-Pair-Share

Think-pair-share is a cooperative learning strategy where students work together to solve a problem or answer a question about an assigned reading. 

Higher Order Thinking

Higher Order Thinking

As students grow older, they are asked by their teachers to do more and more with the information they have stored in their brains. These types of requests require accessing higher order thinking (HOT).

Group of English learner children in preschool

Preschool for ELLs

Early education expert Rebecca Palacios and offers information on the following components of a pre-K ELL program: language instruction, curriculum, professional development, and family outreach.

magnifying glass over the ransome-style letters for the word "clue"

Inferencing

Inferential thinking is a key comprehension skill that develops over time through explicit teaching and lots of practice. Find strategies for teaching inferencing, watch a demonstration, and observe a classroom lesson in action.

Diverse group of elementary students working collaboratively on a project in class

Content Area Literacy

In one school day, an elementary school teacher will instruct children in reading, math, science, social studies, and more. Children should be reading and writing across all these disciplines, using specific techniques and knowledge to help them navigate different types of texts.

Photo by Allison Shelley for EDUimages

Grocery Store Literacy

Grocery Store Literacy

A simple trip to the grocery store can turn into a real learning experience for your child. Below are some easy ways to build literacy and math skills while getting your shopping done at the same time!

woodcut style illustration of the national capitol building

Key Lessons: Class Size and Student Achievement

After more than 20 years of research, class size continues to be at the forefront of the educational and political agenda for schools, school districts, and school boards. Here is a snapshot of what research tells us about class size and student achievement.
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