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Summer Learning Checklists Help Prevent "Summer Learning Loss"

The Summer Matters Campaign provides California parents with resources to combat "summer learning loss."

To help California parents prevent their children from falling prey to “summer learning loss” during the all-important summer vacation months, the statewide “Summer Matters” Campaign recently released two Summer Learning Checklists to assist parents in avoiding summer learning loss and supporting their children’s education over summer break.

A vast body of research shows that when children are not engaged in summer learning and enrichment activities they suffer “summer learning loss” – a loss in academic skills and knowledge during the summer months that can set them back academically when the school year begins.

The Summer Learning Checklists – Top Five Ways to Prevent Summer Learning Loss & Support Your Child's Summertime Learning and Top Ten Ways to Know if Your Child is in a Great Summer Learning Program – are available to download here

In addition to its ten-point checklist that helps parents identify great summer learning programs for their children, the Summer Matters Campaign also highlights two dozen exemplary summer learning programs on a map of Summer Learning “Hot Spots” across California.

Summer learning loss, which is cumulative over time, contributes directly to a widening of the achievement gap between low-income and middle-income students, and a lack of summer learning opportunities also contributes to increased student drop-out rates.

Children from low-income families lose more than two months in reading achievement levels when they aren’t engaged in summer learning, and low-income children to be nearly three grade equivalents behind their more affluent peers in reading by the end of the fifth grade as a result of summer learning loss.

Unequal summer learning opportunities during elementary school years are responsible for about two-thirds of the ninth-grade achievement gap between lower- and higher-income youth. As a result, low-income youth are less likely to graduate from high school or enter college.

Children from low-income households who lack access to summer learning programs also disproportionately gain weight in summer because they lack access to the recreational programs and meal programs available during the school year and spend more time watching TV and being sedentary, thus increasing their risk of childhood obesity.

Parents are the first line of defense when it comes to preventing summer learning loss and supporting their children’s education when school is out. Fortunately, there are plenty of free and easy ways to engage children in enriching summer learning activities that will help them start the new school year successfully.

The Summer Matters Campaign is a statewide initiative to combat “summer learning loss” and expand summertime learning opportunities for children across California. More information about the Summer Matters Campaign is at:

www.summermatters2you.net

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Gretel.
Carrie Turner May 17, 2013 at 04:02 pm
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Libi Uremovic May 13, 2013 at 05:25 pm
the person that wrote this article has the same logic and reasoning skills as the ib cityRead More manager...very similar styles...
Libi Uremovic May 13, 2013 at 05:23 pm
'...MPH degree program to attend a 3-day workshop ... challenge the CNA licensure examination inRead More California.... ... Aristotle felt that by becoming licensed professionals in the U.S. shortly after their arrival to the shores of the U.S., they would have a greater opportunity to receive better clinical positions when they applied for the work-study internships that they were eligible to participate in....' the school told students that were enrolled in masters' degrees that certification as a cna was part of the road to obtaining a masters degree ?? stop right there... masters in public health is an administrative position that has nothing to do with being a cna....and i'm sure people didn't travel thousands of miles to do the grunt work in a hospital.... yea, getting a cna license is a great suggestion for an 18 year old that's going into the nursing field....but not for someone in the masters' program.... and fyi phony college.....in this country a person has to have a 4 year degree before they can apply for the masters' program....
Mark Williams May 12, 2013 at 11:20 pm
Yep!