A sixth Charleston County school will adopt the Orton-Gillingham literacy approach through the Lowcountry Literacy Project, ...
In recent years, the once-esoteric term “evidence-based reading instruction” has spread beyond research institutions to become part of the vernacular of classroom teachers tasked with teaching young ...
Because at Swift School, we teach students with dyslexia and related language-based learning differences the way they learn.
In 2019, a grassroots campaign led by parents succeeded in passing a wave of dyslexia legislation. Many states mandated hallmarks of the Orton-Gillingham method, specifically calling for “multisensory ...
Summer vacation doesn’t mean work stops for teachers. At an RE-1 Valley School Board meeting on Monday, Dawn Cole, kindergarten/first grade resource teacher at Ayres Elementary, Patricia Kramer, fifth ...
I’ve been a teacher since 1992. When I went to college, I was taught that children would learn to read naturally if we simply surrounded them with books. My training emphasized "whole language," ...
CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) — New data shows achievement gaps in education for some Charleston County School District classrooms are shrinking thanks to the groundwork for the Lowcountry Literacy Project.
What started as a group of parents coming together to find resources for their children has turned into a formal program driving results at local public schools. The Lowcountry Literacy Project is an ...
Leading education provider was awarded MI state funding to empower local educators with the knowledge, tools, and implementation support needed to give every student the opportunity to learn how to ...