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Failure to Read Now Grounds for Lawsuit? ACLU Says Yes
The ACLU has filed a lawsuit against some Michigan schools, alleging the district failed to ensure children can read at appropriate grade levels. The dire straits in which this school district is operating is shocking, to say the least.

Students in the Highland Park School District in Michigan are consistently failing at one of the foundational skills necessary for a productive academic and professional life – the ability to read. With a concerning number of students within the district reading well below grade level, the ACLU has decided to take matters in its own hands. The organization has filed eight lawsuits against the school district and the state of Michigan on behalf of students and their parents. The charge? Failure to teach children to read.

This video explains reading levels.

Obscure Law Fuels Lawsuit Fire

According to the Detroit News, the ACLU has filed a class-action lawsuit in Wayne County Circuit Court. The lawsuit alleges that the school district and the state have failed to do their job in ensuring students within the Highland Park School District can read at grade level. The lawsuit further asserts that although students are supposed to be provided with “special assistance” if they don’t make grade-level proficiency in grades four and seven, these students were not given any additional help to bring their reading skills up to par.

The lawsuit calls on an obscure law on the Michigan books known as the “right to read” provision. This law enacted by the state legislature in 1993 states, “A pupil who does not score satisfactorily on the 4th or 7th-grade MEAP reading test shall be

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The Best Resources for Homeschool Lessons

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The Best Resources for Homeschool Lessons
By utilizing the wealth of homeschooling resources available, parents can create an enriching and tailored educational experience for their children at every grade level. This comprehensive guide serves as a starting point.

Homeschooling allows parents the freedom to instruct their children at home; however, sometimes, finding good lesson plans, ideas, and resources can be challenging. Check out these helpful sites to collect ideas and information about developing effective lesson plans for your children!

General Information on Lesson Plans

  • BBC Schools provides a variety of educational materials that parents can adapt to use in their home school classroom. Lesson plans are included in this exceptional resource.
  • Considering Methods and Styles of Homeschooling provides parents with information about how to determine their child's learning style. Understanding your child's learning style will help parents create effective and meaningful lesson plans.
  • Free Homeschool Curriculum helps parents understand different types of free curricula, as well as how to assess if they should use the curriculum with their children. This is a helpful article for parents who are new to homeschooling.
  • Homeschool Weekly Lesson Planner, a resource provided by Donna Young, provides homeschooling parents with printable templates for creating lesson plans.
  • Free Homeschool Curriculum is an article that will help parents determine if a free curriculum is appropriate and valuable to use when homeschooling their children.
  • What is a Lesson Plan?, an article from Let's Homeschool, provides parents with an understanding of what a lesson plan is and how to assess if a lesson plan is effective.

Grade School

  • Dig In!, a lesson from BBC Schools, provides parents with a number of resources for teaching their children about farming
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Soda at School? More Districts are Just Saying No

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Soda at School? More Districts are Just Saying No
As part of our on-going coverage of food reform in public schools, we report on the growing, nationwide trend by school districts to get sugary drinks out of schools – as well as the most recent evidence linking these beverages to a host of health issues.

Sugar-laden drinks like soda and some fruit juices have been linked to a wide range of ills, from the current obesity epidemic to the rising incidence of type II diabetes and heart disease in this country. The soda habit is one that frequently begins during youth, particularly for children that have the sugary drinks readily available at home or at school. Fortunately, many schools are taking a stand against allowing these types of drinks on their campuses, with fewer soda options available at public schools, according to a recent study.

Research Methodology

Recent research conducted by the Institute for Health Research and Policy at the University of Chicago at Illinois indicates that the availability of sugary beverages at the elementary school level is on the decline. The study, conducted by Lindsey Turner and Frank Chaloupka, used the guidelines issued by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) when analyzing their research. The IOM recommends that schools only offer students water, 100-percent juice and non-fat and 1-percent milk on their beverage menus, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Turner and Chaloupka’s research looked at five years of surveys from public elementary schools nationwide. According to Reuters, researchers were able to compile data from hundreds of schools between 2007 and 2011. The information was provided by principals and food service workers that recorded the specific types of beverages available to students and precisely where in the school those beverages were sold.

What the Numbers Show

The research found

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How Much Will Back to School Cost for Your Child? More than Before!

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How Much Will Back to School Cost for Your Child?  More than Before!
As parents get ready to send their kids back to school, we calculate just how far they will have to open their wallets to pay for the rising cost of public education today. Given that parents are paying for the PTA, extracurricular activities, field trips, and more, the answer is quite more than "free" public schools.

Whoever said, “There is no such thing as a free lunch,” could have easily been referring to the state of public education today. In addition to the rising cost of school lunches, many other components of the so-called “free” education system in the United States are also increasing in price. As parents prepare to pack their children off for the world of academia in just a few short weeks, it is wise to weigh the cost of such an endeavor to avoid the sticker shock that many parents face today.

BYOS (Bring Your Own Supplies)

Parents who grew up in school systems that provided supplies to students are often surprised by the long supply lists they are expected to fill before the school year begins. The New York Times reports that one Brooklyn mother spent more than $300 on supplies to equip her two first-graders for their year at Public School 130 last year. Included on the list were items like construction paper, crayons, and markers.

However, this parent might have gotten off relatively easy for this school year, as other parents reported purchases of graphing calculators to the tune of $300 apiece and other expensive equipment. Others cite lists that include basic necessities for the classroom, such as hand sanitizer, soap, and paper towels. One parent even told the New York Times that rugs for the classroom turned up on one of her recent supply lists.

Tina Manis, a parent of a New

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New York City Schools: Churches Allowed to Meet in Public Schools

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New York City Schools: Churches Allowed to Meet in Public Schools
Can religion and public schools mix? Possibly in New York, where a judge recently ruled to allow worship services to be held in public school buildings.

New York churches now have legal permission to meet on weekends in public schools in the city, thanks to a recent ruling by the U.S. District Court in the Southern District of New York. The ruling marks the next milestone in a long-running battle between the Bronx Household of Faith and New York City. The fight began in 1995 when the church sought legal action after being denied the use of a school for their Sunday morning services. The ruling provides access to public schools by churches throughout the city, a move that some celebrated and others promised to continue to fight.

About the Bronx Household of Faith and NYC

In 1995, the Bronx Household of Faith submitted an application to city officials, expressing their desire to hold Sunday worship services at Public School 15. The New York City Department of Education denied the application, which cited the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause as the primary reason for keeping church services out of public school buildings.

However, the church countered that the denial violated its First Amendment rights and sued the city of New York to overturn the decision. The Alliance Defense Fund (ADF) has been representing the Bronx Household of Faith in court ever since the case originated in 1995. According to the Christian Post, the ADF argued against claims by the city that if schools allowed churches to hold worship services at the schools, it would be seen as an endorsement of religion by the

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