Monday, March 2, 2015

Grammar Resources

Helping your kids succeed in school may mean homework for you too.  Here are a couple of good  resources & website I've found helpful.
There are many approaches to teaching grammar, but I have found a couple I really like.  They are easy for parents to implement.

                1)     http://www.rfwp.com/
                       4 level analyses are simple & I think easy to learn. 

                2)     https://www.shurley.com/
                      This is similar to the other one, but uses jingles for memory work.

Both of these sell to “homeschoolers”- so you can buy them & work with your child in the summer, weekends, etc.  This is something they really need to master!
 The Grammar Blue Book
http://www.grammarbook.com/

Grammar Bytes- great siteJ
http://www.chompchomp.com/menu.htm

Saturday, February 28, 2015

Summer: Make it Count!

     Statistically all American students take a backward slide during the summer.  Black kids fare worse.  Aimless Summer don't help Black Students, especially in the area of reading.  Honestly, my kids had great summers- camps, sleeping in, spend the nights, etc.  Academic enrichment was always a part of summer plans though.
   *One note here- parents tell me their kids don't want to do these things and my answer to that: kids have parents because they need them.  Kids, are not capable of knowing what they will need in the long run. Plan for what they need not what they want-  kids generally want to lay around, eat junk, not bathe, and stay up all night.  I gave my kids about a week of that, but then I became a benevolent Dictator.  Here are a few things that I did with my kids every summer. 

1)  Got a Summer Bridge books.  These books reinforce the grade completed & ready the child for the next grade. Get these at Books-a Million, BN, Amazon -Not optional.  Before they went anywhere Summer Bridge pages had to be completed. 

2) Vacation Bible School- I grew up on it & my kids did too.  My own church didn't do daytime VBS, so I took them to another church.  When we moved to Alabaster, Al  Nick was in K5 & went to Westwood Baptist's VBS until the 6th grade.  My good friend Yolanda sent her son's too and this became a yearly norm. Who doesn't like Crafts and Snacks??
    
3)  Library Book Program-  This also was a ritual part of my own upbringing.   Jefferson County has some of the best libraries I been too!  Even though I live in Shelby County, for $50/ year I pay out of county fees.  So worth it! Every library has a Kick-off party and you get a little book bag with a reading logs, book marks and a calendar of activities.  I normally go to Hoover, but have gone to most.  When Devin, my middle son, was little we joined Irondale, Hoover, Homewood & Central one year LOL.  All the programs were so good!  Kids get prizes for books read.  I started taking Livi at 3.
Not so much for High School kids- so we strike our own reading goal prizes:).

4) Camps- I would try to get at least a week or two of a camp the kids really wanted.  We never could afford expensive ones, so I would find cheap or free ones.  When Devin was 12 he was really interested in Aviation.  I found a "Aviation Camp" at the Southern Museum of Flight.  It was $85/week 8-5.  Sports camps can be high, but some take payment plans like the Point Guard College Nick went to last year.  Civil Air Patrol camps and Boy Scout camps are cheap.

5) Volunteering- teaching our kids to be grateful can be hard, giving back helps.  Devin  volunteered at UAB hospital for 2-3 summers.  My older two were camp counselors at inner-city camps. Mission trips and Habitat for Humanity were other things they've done.


     For the past two weeks I've been scouring the internet, googling that is, for camps to send my 10th grade son to.  He will be a junior next year and yes I still make plans for his summers. Maybe it's a boy thing, but left to his own Nick would vegetate all summer & I can't stand bodies not in motion lol.   I try to look for things he would like and that are free or cheap.   No sports camps this year- time for career exploration, so I found a

a)  Camp @ UAB - Material Engineers Camp and it's FREE.
b)  Camp at Tuskegee- not free- but cheap - PACT (Preview Architecture & Construction Science)
c)  Camp @ the CDC in Atlanta FREE - Disease  Detective Camp

Deadlines are approaching on most of these- for High School students- here are links

 
 
 
 
 
http://www.uabmedicine.org/volunteer-services/

Over the years I have grown to think of summer as a time to assess and regroup.  Catch up in areas we struggle and explore new things too.  Start planning now for a summer your kids will love and won't fall behind in.

Gloria J. Adams
Fortify!

Sunday, February 22, 2015

“Education is our passport to the future, for tomorrow belongs to the people who prepare for it today.”
Malcolm X

The Art of Learning = Work

     There is an art to Learning- work. With some people learning is automatic.  My middle son Devin was a natural learner, a virtual sponge.   I was not.  I had to work at learning things.  When I was in nursing school, I made flash cards in every class and then I would push Devin in a stroller & memorize the terms.  After I felt I had learned them, I would write them down.  Then I would recreate the outline from my notes or book. I could teach the material by test time.  This method took time, but earned me almost all A’s & the highest grade point average in my class.        

       Our children must be taught the art of learning.  It takes three simple steps


1)  Input (Knowledge)- (Who, What, Where, and the When of a subject)

First, they must learn the vocabulary that is common to the discipline. This means memorization.   For example, in mathematics: addition, addend, sum, subtrahend, minuend, difference, etc.  As well as formulas, times tables, etc. Each subject has its set of terms, without knowing them a student can't participate in the discipline.  The one area I struggled with in college was math.  I was one of those people who had to take all of the developmental courses.  Realizing not knowing my times tables was a huge stumbling block was an eye-opener.  Insisting your kids know all the terms and formulas necessary to be “fluent” in math falls on the parent.  The teachers may teach them, but they can’t make sure every kid knows them.   Repetition helps to ingrain new knowledge into the mind which helps the mind to make sense of the information faster. By absorbing as much as you can about the subject, the more “stuff” you have to work with and organize, make sense of--- the better one “knows” something, the better one can “understand” it.
  
 2)  Processing (Understanding)-(Why of a subject.)
In the Processing stage, all of the information you absorbed in the Input stage is now put in orderly, deeper patterns.  Does all of the information agree with one another, how does it all go together?   We line everything up – it's good to write info down in order and relationships.  For example: terms come 1st & then formulas in math. Sum, Product,  Area of a triangle, the order of operations, etc.  We come to know what something is by “making sense” of the information.

3)  Output (Wisdom)- (How of a subject)
Output is where our understanding of a subject is then put into our own words as we move the information from the mental to the verbal.  Fully attained wisdom is knowing, learning a subject in such a way that you can teach it.  Not simply to know or understand it. At this level -when the information can be taught, or written out in an essay or passed on a test- your child has learned it.  Wisdom deals with the application of Knowledge and Understanding- in written, oral or test forms.

     If kids start out really learning, they will increase in wisdom.   If they never learn to learn they will not be equipped for college and higher learning.

   The good thing is- these are habits that can be developed.  A way of using our God given brains and it’s never too late. I was 30 learning my times tables, but I excelled in nursing school after that. 

 Your kids will probably resist, but teach them anyway- they might hate you now, but they will love you later.
  www.quizlet.com is a great place to find flash cards or to make them & there is an App.:)

Gloria J. Adams
Fortify! © 2015
 

Monday, February 16, 2015

Question of the Day

There's an old saying that "More is Caught than Taught"-
Here's the Question:

Do you personally model Literacy in your kids lives?  How much do you read? 
Please answer this poll by posting your answer in the comments  section below.


Reading Amounts in 2014:

0-1 books/month   
2-4/books/month
Greater than 4 books/month

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Fortify! starts a small group

      On Sunday afternoon, I had the pleasure of hosting a group of young scholar-athletes in my home.  It was the first meeting of an ACT/College prep small group that grew from talks with a couple of phenomenal mothers ( D. Gamble & Y. Harrell) .  The aim of the group is to- in the long run-develop tools needed in college and in the short run - raise ACT scores for college admission.
      Sharing the articles I started this blog with was eye-opening for these young men, who are sharp and capable of succeeding in every arena in life. We also looked at several other articles: what makes you middle class, the 30 best paying majors & the 25 worst paying majors.  Many black students major in the worst paying majors, resulting in a less than "middle class" income.
      After a time of assessing everyone's baseline knowledge- the guys were assigned some "homework" for next week.  I guess you could say it's "enrichment"! 
      The moms had  assignments too, so they can provide accountability.  Informed parents are the key to our children's future.  Fights about education never seems to stop in the government and parents are subjected to yet another "new" educational reform.  Before they ever figure it out, what's going to work -your kid will be grown.  Helping parents to make sure their own kids get an education in the meantime is my goal. 
      My next post will be about -Learning.  Look for it soon.

Gloria J. Adams
Fortify!
 
 There is no more powerful advocate than a parent armed with information and options."
-- Rod - Paige, Secretary of Education

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

101 Books for College-bound Kids

  101 Books for College-bound Kids starts with a list for middle school kids, so don't be afraid to pick a great book for your 5th or 6th grader.  These are great books to read with your kids.  They're challenging and therefore College Prep.   Read the 1st couple of pages aloud to get them started.  Then go back & forth if need be- the goal is to get them to  read from good books with rich language. 

 *A note of caution- every book does not have to be hard- ideally kids should read 400 pages/month.
It's good to read a variety: easy, just right and hard books.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Reading Resources - Part 1

 Reading is to the mind, what exercise is to the body.
-Richard Steele, The Tatler

     Reading is a privilege that Black people in the past died for.   In a week or so, we will celebrate the accomplishments of  Black men & women who overcame great odds in the 1800 & 1900's despite the rĂ©sistance they met.  Black History month will cause us to marvel at the bravery they showed while learning to read despite being prohibited by slave owners and later entering schools that they were not welcomed in.  Black Americans in the past knew illiteracy locked them out of any chances of a better life.

     As the Black middle class is faced with predictions of doom in 2015, we need to remind ourselves and our children that illiteracy is one of the main barriers to attaining higher goals.
In order to ensure our kids are where they need to be, parents need to be knowledgeable about literacy.   It is developmental.  Most kids in middle class areas " learn to read"- meaning the benchmarks that must be met by 3rd grade are normally met.  It is when they need to kick it up a notch and "read to learn", the benchmarks for 4th grade and up, that the problems begin.   Reading is the foundational building block for learning. With that in mind, parents must know where their kids fall on the reading development ladder. 

      The ability to read and comprehend increasingly difficult material is essential to our children's success in academia.  College degrees are one of the hallmarks of the occupations of the "Middle Class" and many occupations are no longer attainable with just a Baccalaureate degree.   Reading needs to start early & continue to build.  Just like the quote says above, it's like exercise for the mind.
It's not unreasonable to expect your kids to read 30-60 minutes a day.
     
      This is a hard time for raising middle class kids of  any race but for Black kids especially.  Our kids have a lot of luxury in their lives and a lot of the time, we don't make them do anything hard. Establishing habits that will enhance their education and get them ready to succeed will probably be hard.  When it comes to reading, set standards that will help your kids become better students in the end.  Start small if needed, but be intentional.   Buy books or check them out from the library.  My kids have been dragged to the library all their lives! I love libraries and we live in a great nation with wonderful ones everywhere.  

     I am no expert educator, but you don't have to be for your kids to read well. Most anyone can teach a child to read and you can certainly know if they are struggling.  I have put reading lists, reading assessment tests and links to literacy sites on the PAGES on this site- next to the Home tab.  Listen to your child read aloud- even in high school-reading aloud works to improve struggling readers and make reluctant readers read. It also builds confidence and poise for public speaking which in turn provides benefits in interviews and other social interactions. I read with my 10th grader still- especially if it's a hard text - we will take turns.  Last year, he read the unabridged Illiad by Homer and he read parts of it to me and I read parts to him. * don't ridicule, teach gently any mispronunciations.

A few Guidelines when it comes to Reading:

#1- Start reading  aloud to your babies from day 1! 

According to, http://1000booksbeforekindergarten.org/, " Reading aloud is widely recognized as the single most important activity leading to language development. Among other things, reading aloud builds word-sound awareness in children, a potent predictor of reading success"

"Research shows that the more words parents use when speaking to an 8-month-old infant, the greater the size of their child's vocabulary at age 3.  The landmark Hart-Risley study on language development documented that children from low-income families hear as many as 30 million fewer words than their more affluent peers before the age of 4".

The brain has to think when words are used to develop a story, the brain forms pictures of the little bears, goldilocks, etc.  Watching T.V.- the work of imagination is already done.  They only hear dialogue. 

#2 Make sure your child is reading by 1st grade, BUT beware of gimmicks!
Things like "Teach your baby to read"- are normally a waste & could be damaging in the end.
Reading is like potty training in the sense, the optimum time is child dependent.  I have 4 kids &  they all started reading at different times.  Generally, learning to read is not a problem for middle class students, Black or White.  It's what happens after they learn to read that is the problem.

*I will say though, I ended up teaching my youngest how to read over his 1st grade Christmas break. I  homeschooled him in K-5 and he wasn't ready to read.  I really didn't worry about it, but when his 1st grade teacher sent readers home, he had no real tools for figuring out the words.  After a conference with the teacher & finding out she had no real plan for teaching reading, I knew I had to intervene.  With a set of index cards & Bob Books- he was reading in 2 weeks.  By the beginning of the 2nd grade he was the only boy in the highest reading group.  If your child is not where they need to be - intervene. 

http://www.readingrockets.org/atoz/1122/all  (Excellent website about reading!)

#3 Make sure your child is proficient at reading by the end of 3rd grade !
 From the website www.gradelevelreading.net -
"Research shows that proficiency in reading by the end of third grade enables students to shift from learning to read to reading to learn, and to master the more complex subject matter they encounter in the fourth grade curriculum. Most students who fail to reach this critical milestone falter in the later grades and often drop out before earning a high school diploma. Yet two-thirds of U.S. fourth graders are not proficient readers, according to national reading assessment data. This disturbing statistic is made even worse by the fact that more than four out of every five low-income students miss this critical milestone."

#4 Don't stop Reading Aloud to your kids when they learn to read! 
You want to continue to expose your child to books that have a rich story line & vocabulary.  What they can read at grade level in the 3rd & 4th grade may not really enrich them.  When my youngest son Nick was in the 4th grade one of his assigned books was Rifles for Waite about a boy in a border state during the Civil War.  He could have read it, but for times sake- we got it on CD's from the library.  On the way to soccer & back we listened to this great book.  It became one of our fondest memories & started a tradition.  We would listen to books as we drove to practices, games, etc.  I would quiz him for retention & some had study guides.  He made A's on the reading tests, so it became a supplement.  A word of caution- this doesn't take the place of individual reading.  Your kids need to actually read.  It was in addition.  We homeschooled using a book heavy curriculum so it help to do some reading aloud.

#5 In the 4th grade start to introduce harder reading selections.  
By the 5th grade a strong reader needs to shift to stronger books. This will make the middle grades count.  By 9th & 10th they will be able to handle advanced texts & AP courses.

Some of the books on my 5th & 6th graders book list were-

The Bronze Bow, Elizabeth George Speare.
 The Eagle of the Ninth, Rosemary Sutcliff.
Tales of the Greek Heroes
Tales of Ancient Egypt
Padraic Colum, The Children’s Homer (Iliad and Odyssey)
Beowulf: A New Telling, by Robert Nye (Laurel Leaf, 1982); a good (and very exciting)
adaptation on about a sixth-grade level.
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, verse translation by J.R. R. Tolkein
The Sword in the Stone, T. H. White’s marvelous reworking of Malory’s Morte
d’Arthur (Philomel Books, 1993)
Shakespeare Stories, by Leon Garfield (Houghton Mifflin, 1998),

Reading lists are on the Pages portion of this blog.
Look for my next post -Reading Resources Part 2
Gloria J. Adams
Fortify!

Reading

     After my ACT post on 1/24/15,  I received some requests for reading lists- I have put them as well as other resources on PAGES at the top of the blog.

     First, a Disclaimer.  I am not a professional educator.  I am just a Black middle class mom, who has been on a 24 year journey to ensure my own kids received the type of education they needed to be successful adults.  I am neither a public school basher nor a homeschool advocate. I have been involved in both.   I am a parent advocate.  I believe God expects us to raise our kids, protect, nurture, prepare and launch them.  In this role, we must use whatever resources are necessary to help us achieve this lofty goal. Sharing the information, knowledge and resources I've gained over the years is my purpose for Fortify!  Armed with help, middle class parents can beat the odds of their kids not doing well.
    
     There is a huge body of information available on reading, yet reading scores for Black middle class kids remain low.  All the knowledge in the world won't help if we don't access it and then insist our children do what they are supposed to.  I will be developing posts addressing the critical benchmarks parents should be aware of with reading.  If you are a middle class or even a working class parent you can ensure your child can reach these benchmarks.  There is no excuse for anyone to find out all of a sudden that their 7th grade child can't really read that well.  We should know what they are doing and how they are doing  throughout their education.

     There are tools you can use in your home to determine where you child is at.  You will need to spend time with your kids daily (or at least a couple of times a week), have them read to you- out loud even into high school.  Then take note of what you find and don't criticize- strategize. If you feel like you don't know or can't tell what they are doing wrong, then there is no problem in looking up word together in the dictionary. Learning is something that we should all arrive to do every single day. That is how growth happens, a little bit at a time. Everyday.

    A good plan would be:
1) Read my post Reading Resources Part 1
2) Use one of the tools for reading assessment under Pages
3) Pick a reading list & set a reading goal

Let me know how I can help!
Gloria J. Adams
Fortify!

"Once you learn to read, you will be forever free"
- Frederick Douglass.


 

Saturday, January 24, 2015

ACT Scores & Why They Matter.

      Many of my son Nick’s friends are juniors and they are starting to get their ACT scores back.  A lot of them were disappointed. Many are planning to take ACT Prep classes before taking it again, hoping to improve their scores.  So, I thought it would be a good time to talk about standardized testing in general & specifically the ACT.  Standardized testing gets a bad rap in the Black community.  Historically, Black children have not performed well as a group on standardized tests. According to the 2014 ACT stats for Alabama, the mean score for Black students was 17.2.  I’m not sure how that’s even possible unless you were asleep. Even in better schools, studies say Black kids do worse on average. It is not true of all Black students of course. My middle son and many of his friends made scores of 32-36.  What made the difference?  What is the root cause for this poor performance?  Testing is not going away, so what can we do to raise ACT scores?

       First, we need to understand the test.  The ACT doesn’t measure how smart you are per se.  It’s not an IQ test. A person may be very intelligent and have extreme potential, but if they have not mastered the subject matter while in school then they will probably not do well on this test.  The ACT simply tests for college and career readiness.  It answers the question of whether or not a student has learned enough English, Reading, Science and Math to be considered educated. The scores are from 11-36.   Each correlates to a level of mastery in a subject. 
     That is why I have an issue with the tendency to excuse black students’ bad scores.  The truth is, a lot of the time they have not been challenged enough! They don't have a good handle on grammar and composition causing poor performance in English. They haven't read enough difficult books to perform well on the Science Reasoning and Reading Comprehension which are really both reading tests. So, yes, the scores come back: 17.2.   There is no mystery to the ACT, it is a tool to gauge where our students are. The ACT tests the skills needed to perform at a high enough level to successfully engage in college level work.  Colleges use it to determine if a student will be able to function in college and if they will be able to read and comprehend the material.  Will they be able to write the papers, can they do the math?
      The ACT has set benchmarks- at the 8th (Explore), 10th (Plan) & 12th (ACT)  grade levels  The benchmarks are numerical levels your student should be at if they plan to be ready for college.  If they are not, there is time to adjust and improve.  High ACT scores are an indicator to colleges that a student has high potential for degree completion. Low scores mean the opposite- the likelihood of them finishing a degree program is slim. Will ACT prep courses help?  They might help with strategy, but not with mastery of the content. At best, these prep courses help a student identify weaknesses to focus on for the next testing iteration. 
    SecondlyMASTER MATH! The earlier, the better.  Ideally, you should plan for your student to master arithmetic by 6th grade. Then take Pre-Algebra in the 7th & Algebra in the 8th.  This will allow them to go as high in math as possible.  Even if they are not “good” , they need high level math. They should memorize math facts & formulas. If they are struggling you might need to get a tutor. I couldn’t help my 10th grader with Algebra 1 & changed textbooks twice, tried on-line & ended with a text way too hard for me even with answers.  I finally broke down & took him to a place called Mathnesium in Inverness, AL.  For $300/month, he had unlimited tutoring sessions. I took him & the text book to the owner and said help!!  It was an awesome experience.  He had mastered all of the Algebra 1 concepts & the text ended up being very advanced.  The best thing was Nick had confidence in his math ability.  We used the service for 2 months.
     Lastly, the thing that really has the greatest lasting impact is READING. Read, read, and read. I can tell you already-your school does not assign enough reading.  Students need to read full length books that increase in difficulty.  Back when my son Devin was in the 4th grade, one of my husband’s clients' kids went to the Advent school (a private school in Birmingham, Al)  and I always liked to know about school reading lists.   Her daughter had books like the Prince & the Pauper assigned, while my neighbors in Hoover were reading A 4th grade Nothing .  The Advent is a feeder school for The Altamont and Indian Springs- both are nationally ranked, elite private schools.  Altamont has rigorous reading requirements for their students- 3 books a month, not including school work.  From the 5th grade on my son Devin read from a Classic book list.  He read a lot of books (& skipped a few), but we never did any reading comprehension books.  They can just read & tell you what happened. Devin &  I both were shocked when he got a 33 on Reading & a 33 on Science (lots of reading) on his ACT.  We did nothing special, but read lots of good books.  * He loved reading though and read all the Harry Potters in the 6th grade.
     What if your student hates reading?  Or doesn’t hate it just could live without it?  Make him read anyway- tie it to food, the phone, car keys- after 30 pages you can have dinner that usually works.
     Having better ACT scores is possible for black students, but not if they don’t do the hard work.  It’s the same for everybody.

"There are no secrets to success. It is the result of preparation, hard work, and learning from failure."

          -Colin Powell

That may sound corny, but it's true.  As parents we must hold our kids to a high standard.
Gloria J. Adams



© 2015

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Why I had to start this blog- FORTIFY!

01/21/2015
     Statistics are funny little things- used for good or evil, for building a case or tearing one down.  Monday, on MLK day,  I read a couple of  blog posts with statistics so alarming, to not respond would be neglect.  The timing I'm sure, done for drama, gave them the intended punch. Both painted a dismal picture of the black "middle class".  The alarming statistic said,  " 7 out of 10 middle class black kids will experience downward mobility as adults".   That means 70% of our kids, not just the kids in the "hood", but our kids, in our nice homes & our nice neighborhoods will more than likely not be able to attain what we did.  And worse, will be in the same neighborhoods we worked to avoid.  At first I was in a state of despair. How could this be? We just arrived at "middle class" a couple of generations ago, so it can't be over already, not yet.   I know several kids of friends & family that somehow grew up & are now unemployed or underemployed.  Therefore, they did have downward mobility. So it could be true, BUT what was missing from these articles was why this has happened & what can be done to stop it. Where was the remedy, the hope?

     Now, I am really nobody, I am not a "leader", I hold no political office, I'm not a doctor or a judge.  I am simply a 2nd generation Black middle class woman who is sick of being lumped in statistics that only spin the story the media wants. Appealing to God after calming done - I thought of some things that are important, things not included in the posts.  There are facts and there is truth, but they are not the same.  Facts are grounded in reality, the now- what we see.  Truth is grounded in faith, the future- what we hope for.  These posts were full of facts and that's good.  The facts are sobering.  They let us know where we stand.  They let us know what we are up against, but they are not the end of the story.

     There is a reason why our kids are slipping and there are solutions to ensure they get and stay on higher ground.  I began to think of how it's like in Revelations, where an angel goes to all of these churches, telling them what they did good and what they are lacking- to the church at Sardis in Rev. 3 he says, "strengthen that which remains".  There are 3 out of 10 making it- what are they doing different?   What made the difference?  We need to highlight successful practices and replicate them.  We can change the statistics to 4 out of 10, then 5 out of 10, etc.. We have to, we must. For our own children & the generations to come.

     This blog is aimed at -strengthening- fortifying wherever you & your children are. In order to do that there is an investment that has to be made- of time, of patience, of learning and sometimes money, so you can help your kids. Be concerned, but not alarmed.  The links to the blog posts I referred to are below. I will be posting regularly- please post a comment or I can be reached at reapinjoy@aol.com.

Gloria J. Adams
Fortify!

© 2015

http://www.brookings.edu/blogs/social-mobility-memos/posts/2015/01/15-mlk-black-opportunity-reeves

http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2015/01/how-black-middle-class-kids-become-black-lower-class-adults/384613/