
We get regular medical checkups for ourselves and our kids. Problems and diseases that used to maim and kill are often averted. Thanks to research on how children learn to read—and the translation of that research into classroom materials and early screening assessments—we can now screen for an avert almost all early reading failure.
Preventing Early Reading Failure—and Its Devastating Downward Spiral
The Evidence for Early Intervention
By Joseph K. Torgesen
The evidence is in: The children who we hoped would be "late bloomers" in reading rarely are. Their early and modest reading weakness impedes enjoyment and deters practice. Soon, their small reading problems spiral into devastating ones. But with new easy-to-use tools, we can identify children headed toward failure—and prevent it—as early as kindergarten.
Waiting Rarely Works: "Late Boomers" Usually Just Wilt
Best Bets: Selecting Core Reading Programs and Interventions
Practicing Prevention
One District's Success
By Catherine Paglin
This school district has taken what's known about screening, core instruction, and intervention and put it all in place. The result: Just two percent of children leave first grade unable to read, compared to 15 percent six years ago.
Women's Rights—Not Just for Westerners
By Azar Nafisi
When Nafisi returned to her native Iran in 1979, the Ayatollah Khomeini was stripping Iranians, especially women, of basic human rights. Back in America, "under the name of cultural relativism or multiculturalism," many condoned these changes as simply "their culture." But, she asks, if we don't condone virginity checks or forced adolescent marriage for American women, why should we believe these practices are reasonable for Iranian women?
Fantastic Journey
How Scientists Figured Out the Shape and Size of the Earth
By Joy Hakim
In her new series of science books for middle-schoolers, Joy Hakim combines science, history, geography, culture, and art to tell the story of science in a way kids love. And don't be surprised if you learn a lot yourself.
Eats, Shoots & Leaves
By Lynne Truss
Do mistake's in punctuation drive you crazy? Are you losing you're patience with peoples poor writing? You just might be a stickler; if so, Truss offers some welcome relief.











