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75% of Americans oppose US attempting to take control of Greenland, CNN poll finds; Canada, China slash EV, canola tariffs in reset of ties; Trump administration announces health plan concept; Congress considers bill to make cars with electronic door handles safer; Michigan Planned Parenthood closures fuel ongoing debate.

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Trump threatens to invoke the Insurrection Act, as Minnesotans protest ICE. A Homeland Security official announced a run for Congress and federal courts move to keep the administration from getting voter data from two blue states.

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Rural Appalachia is being eyed for massive AI centers, but locals are pushing back, some farmers say government payments meant to ease tariff burdens won't cover their losses and rural communities explore novel ways to support home-based childcare.

4th-Grade Reading Gap Follows Arizona Income Gap

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Tuesday, January 28, 2014   

PHOENIX - Seventy-two percent of Arizona fourth-graders are reading below grade level. That's one finding of a new Kids Count Data Snapshot from the Annie E. Casey Foundation. According to the Foundation's senior consultant Elizabeth Burke Bryant, one key to success in life is learning to read in the early grades.

"Up until third grade, they're learning to read," she said. "After third grade, it's expected that they know how to read in order to absorb the material."

Although Arizona fourth-grade reading levels have improved over the past decade, the reading gap between higher- and lower-income pupils is getting worse. The report finds that 43 percent of Arizona's higher-income fourth-graders are reading at or above grade level, compared to only 15 percent of lower-income kids.

Children's Action Alliance research associate Joshua Oehler said the best way to start reversing the income-related reading gap would be to restore funding to a number of programs cut during the recession.

"The Healthy Families, child care subsidy, Early Childhood Block Grant, all of those things help low-income families," he said.

The report says low-income children fare even worse when they attend economically-disadvantaged schools. Arizona lawmakers have cut education funding by 17 percent since 2008, the third-most of any state.

The Casey Foundation report also found widening gaps in reading achievement along racial lines, with African-American, Latino and Native American students posting the lowest scores. Oehler said the findings have implications for Arizona's economic future.

"We've got to make sure all children, regardless of race or income status, are getting the support they need to read, so we can have a good work force and attract businesses and start new businesses here in Arizona," he stated.

The report says the first eight years of a child's life are critical for future learning and emotional development.

The report is at AECF.org.




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