May/June 2008
"Equity, Access,
and Opportunity"
Despite challenges, more
districts adopt one-to-one laptop programs
by Colleen Gillard
Over the last few years, school districts across
the country have initiated one-to-one laptop programs. According
to a newly released nationwide survey, more than one-fourth of
the 2,500 largest U.S. school districts have at least one full
grade of students with their own laptops—a figure that is
expected to rise to 50 percent within three years. While the largest
one-to-one laptop programs are the districtwide program for grades
6–12 in Henrico County, Va., and Maine’s statewide
program in middle schools and some high schools, states including
Texas, Illinois, Indiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire,
New Mexico, Pennsylvania, Vermont, and Florida are also investing
in one-to-one computing.
The practical issues involved in implementing
these programs are significant, experts say, and so is the expense.
In some high-profile cases, districts have canceled programs for
either one or the other reason. Nonetheless, many educators believe
it’s just a matter of time before laptops are as ubiquitous
as lunchboxes in students’ backpacks.
“It’s all about equity, access,
and opportunity,” says Claudia Mansfield Sutton, a spokeswoman
for the American
Association of School Administrators, which co-sponsored the
nationwide survey, titled America’s
Digital Schools 2008 (ADS08). “If a child can only
use the computer lab once or twice a week, how can he or she compete?
With a laptop, kids can access [digital] content anytime, anywhere.”
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Small
Kids, Big Words
Research-based strategies for building
vocabulary from preK to grade 3
by Laura Pappano
Morning meeting begins with—no surprise—the
weather. But when preschool teacher Radha Hernandez describes
the drenching winter downpour, she doesn’t reach for a rainy
day symbol to stick on a calendar. She reaches for words.
“I was curled up under the covers. I was
cozy, toasty warm and outside I heard an am-a-a-a-zing thing,”
says Hernandez, a founding teacher at Lee
Academy, a pilot school in Boston serving children from age
three to third grade. “Thunder! Thunder! I heard thunder
outside my window. It was a loud, crashing, booming sound.”
The ten children clustered in a horseshoe on
the rug (two others will arrive later) perk up. Timmy insists
he didn’t hear it. No one believes him, but he stands his
verbal ground. “I didn’t want to hear it and so that
is why I didn’t listen,” he says.
Molly, who’s four, adds, “I guess
he was ignoring it.”
It is, of course, always cute when small kids
use big words. But a growing body of research and classroom practice
show that building a sophisticated vocabulary at an early age
is also key to raising reading success—and narrowing the
achievement gap. At schools like Lee Academy, teachers are overcoming
the age-old habit of speaking to young children in simplified
language and instead deliberately weaving higher-level word choices
into preschool and primary grade classrooms. Whether it’s
a discussion at morning meeting, informal talk at the block area,
or a selection of read-aloud books, teachers are exposing younger
children to language that, in many cases, exceeds the vocabulary
level of a typical conversation between college graduates.
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The
Power of Family Conversation
School and community programs help parents
build children's literacy from birth
by Laura Pappano
School matters, but literacy starts at home.
Teachers armed with reading contracts and carefully worded missives
have long urged parents to read aloud to their children. But now
there is a second and perhaps more powerful message: Talk to your
kids, too.
Mounting research that links language-rich home
environments with reading success and school achievement is driving
educators and community groups to target families long before
children register for school. In addition to Todd Risley and Betty
Hart’s landmark work correlating verbal home environments
with future literacy, Catherine
E. Snow at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and David
K. Dickinson, a professor of teaching and learning at Vanderbilt
University’s Peabody College, are assembling data on the
impact of early literacy interventions. Their ongoing study of
57 low-income families reveals that home support for literacy
markedly influences kindergarten language skills and fourth grade
reading comprehension test scores. No wonder those at the leading
edge of literacy want to increase the quantity and quality of
conversations between parents and children beginning at birth.
“It is really what parents have been doing
at home that children have to draw on when they become readers
and writers,” says Gail Jordan, associate professor of education
at Bethel University in St. Paul, Minn., who says children from
three to five are “ripe” for engaging in rich language
learning.
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