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Three US Marshal task force officers killed in NC shootout; MA municipalities aim to lower the voting age for local elections; breaking barriers for health equity with nutritional strategies; "Product of USA" label for meat items could carry more weight under the new rule.

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Big Pharma uses red meat rhetoric in a fight over drug costs. A school shooting mother opposes guns for teachers. Campus protests against the Gaza war continue, and activists decry the killing of reporters there.

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More rural working-age people are dying young compared to their urban counterparts, the internet was a lifesaver for rural students during the pandemic but the connection has been broken for many, and conservationists believe a new rule governing public lands will protect them for future generations.

Grade-Level Reading Becomes Urgent Priority in Michigan

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011   

DETROIT - Because schools can't do it alone, Detroit, Ann Arbor and more than 150 other cities across the nation are making early literacy an urgent priority for 2012.

Two-thirds of U.S. students are not proficient readers as they finish the early grades, statistics show, and research from the Annie E. Casey Foundation finds that once children miss that benchmark, they're far more likely to drop out of school later.

Toni Hartke, director of the Wayne County Great Start Collaborative, says experts now know that the focus on literacy needs to start long before children start school.

"Making sure that they are healthy and then ready to succeed in school, getting them ready for kindergarten. That's going to increase that third-grade score."

Ralph Smith, the Casey foundation's senior vice president who is leading the national Campaign for Grade-Level Reading, sees plenty of places where creative opportunities have yet to be tapped.

"Recreation centers, churches and congregations, libraries and athletic programs. Communities can create literacy-rich programs."

While many early-childhood education groups focus on kindergarten through age 5, Hartke says her group focuses on prenatal needs through age 8.

"You have to start even before the child is born, to make sure they are going to be born healthy."

If they have special needs, Hartke says, early intervention often prevents failure later on. A Casey Foundation report shows that poor children who don't read proficiently are 13 times more likely not to finish high school, compared with good readers who never have lived in poverty.

The communities which have joined the Campaign for Grade-Level Reading network are competing for All-America City Awards which recognize quality literacy projects. Details about the awards are online at gradelevelreading.net.

The Casey Foundation report, "Double Jeopardy: How Third-Grade Reading Skills and Poverty Influence High School Graduation," is online at gradelevelreading.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/DoubleJeopardyReport040511FINAL.pdf.


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