The Maine Monitor on MSN
A Maine educator didn’t have a curriculum to teach a foundational skill for reading. So she created her own
The instructional coach revamped how young kids pull apart and put together letter sounds to form words. Her program is now being piloted in six Maine school districts.
Island View Elementary teacher Teisha Langford walked down the aisle with her husband Scott Langford in a "Q-U" wedding ceremony to teach students the "quah" sound.
A century-old musical work by Ethel Smyth is back, but without inherited tradition, each performance reshapes its identity.
With its twirly cord and landline-like features, the Tin Can is giving kids a crash course in phone etiquette. For example: Talk!
The Lowcountry Literacy Project is an initiative pushing to close the literacy gap through the Orton-Gillingham approach.
Discover the brain science behind how birds learn to sing, from song nuclei to social cues and critical learning windows.
Reading books, we all know, is good for your brain. Books not only teach us about whatever subject we’re reading about, but ...
Our letters include political crossfire over Lauderhill’s upcoming municipal election and a $65 million bond issue on the ...
Since the school district implemented a new phonics program in Bradley Elementary School, 80% of the kids are now reading above grade level.
When companies blame AI for layoffs, what are they really hiding? Why leadership decisions, not technology, are driving workforce cuts.
Democracy does not sustain itself. It survives only when each generation is intentionally welcomed into civic life and given a real opportunity to participate. That responsibility feels especially ...
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