DANVILLE — Sam Betz placed the colored consonant “S” card on top of the colored “EE” vowel card and sounded out the letters.
“Ssss Eeee,” he sounded out. “See.”
His classmate, Julia Long, also gave her cards a try.
“Mmmm Oooo,” she sounded out, pointing to each card. “Moo.”
Sam and Julia, who will be second-graders in the Danville Area School District this fall, are using the program SpellRead to help enhance their reading and writing skills.
The students are two of 40 involved in the summer school literacy program, which just began the SpellRead lesson this year.
Becky Perruquet, a kindergarten teacher at the Danville Elementary School, said the program helps students learn sounds, spell sounds and read and write.
“It’s important literacy skills be strong,” she said. “... The district believes in practicing these literacy skills.”
The summer session is open to students who just completed kindergarten through fourth grade. A balanced program of reading and writing is practiced.
It lasts five weeks — two in June, two in July and one in August. It’s 9 to 11:30 a.m. Mondays through Thursdays and funded through a tutoring grant the district previously received.
“District teachers recommend students based on their standardized test scores from the end of the year,” said reading specialist Penny Gaugler.
The summer program is an annual event, but SpellRead is new this year.
Gaugler said she learned of the program at a conference, and that with constant practice, the students will show improvement after a year. It will be used only by students in grades two through five.
“It’s about getting kids up in their test scores,” she said. Students discuss books they read, keep a journal and practice both reading and comprehension.
The children will read out loud, listen to reading and do word lessons throughout the summer in an effort to strengthen their abilities. They will be tested in August to determine what progress has been made.
Perruquet said studies show that students who don’t practice over the summer lose as many as three levels, and Gaugler said 20 percent of word knowledge also is lost.
But it was obvious the students didn’t find the summer session like school, but more of a fun experience.
As Sam and Julia continued practicing with their group, they were praised each time for their good work.
“That was awesome, Sam,” Gaugler told the boy as he finished his turn. “You’re doing so great, Julia.”
News
Kids use SpellRead program to improve skills
- News
-
-
Cases involving gas station drug sales advance to Montour County Court
DANVILLE – Three people charged with selling heroin and Oxycotin tablets during two separate transactions at a convenience store lot Jan. 2 will face court action.
-
Danville school options aired with borough council
DANVILLE — After borough officials pledged to work with school officials toward a decision on the flood-damaged middle school, council members voted not to give or sell any farmland it owns. The purpose of the unanimous action by the council Tuesday night was so the district knows that rumored option to move the school won’t happen. The borough owns a farm across from the Danville Primary School.
-
Five watershed projects receive $873,000 in state funding
NORTHUMBERLAND -- Five Valley watershed projects will get nearly $873,000 from the state Department of Environmental Protection, which announced funding for 73 projects to improve watersheds, stormwater runoff, acid mine drainage and educational programs, among other environmental efforts.
-
Dispute turns into gun threat, troopers say
After an argument in which his wife threatened divorce, William Warren Woolsey, 36, grabbed a .22-caliber rifle and told her to meet him in the bedroom, saying he would kill himself, state police at Milton said.
-
Mom allegedly beat toddlers with brush
MIFFLINBURG -- A 22-year-old Mifflinburg mother has been charged with beating her two toddlers with a hairbrush until they bled from abrasions all over their faces and bodies, state police at Milton said. The abuse came to light when Brittany Morgan Sullivan's parents came home and found the wounds on their grandchildren, according to police.
-
Commissioners give disabled Sunburian a chance
SUNBURY -- A 22-year-old disabled man asked the Northumberland County commissioners a life-changing question last week. "Can I have a job?" Giuseppe Bua, of Sunbury, was born with Osteogenesis Imperfecta, a genetic disorder in which bones break easily. Sometimes the bones break for no known reason. The disorder also can cause weak muscles, brittle teeth, a curved spine and hearing loss.
-
Trucking firm to add 25 drivers
MILTON -- The president of Watsontown Trucking Co. said Tuesday that his firm will be hiring 25 truck drivers in addition to several diesel technician and management positions, all due to expansion. President Steve Patton said the company, which has been in the Milton Industrial Park since 2004, bought 14 additional acres in the park, adding 10,000 square feet of office space and maintenance facilities. Construction on the new space, he said, will begin shortly and is targeted to be completed by June.
-
Mayor wants trucks to help fund roads
SUNBURY -- Mayor David Persing is frustrated with truck traffic entering the former Celotex site on North Front Street, and he wants to do something about it. Charge an impact fee. Gas companies have paid millions to repair roads damaged by trucks in the Marcellus shale region, and Persing wants to levy a fee to compensate the city for damage to roads caused by trucks hauling drilling waste through the city. About $25 per truck per visit, he said.
-
18-year-old dies in truck crash on Routes 11-15
LIVERPOOL -- An 18-year old Selinsgrove man was killed when his pickup truck collided with a tractor-trailer on Routes 11-15 in Perry County.
-
Reactions to budget plan mixed
SUNBURY -- Reaction to Gov. Tom Corbett's proposed 2012-2013 budget came from all directions Tuesday.
-
Proposal alters school funding
HARRISBURG -- Gov. Tom Corbett has proposed steady funding for K-12 basic education in his $27.1 billion budget for 2012-13. But how school districts get their money will change as four line items will be combined into one block grant for most basic education funding. That has made for some debate about any actual increase to basic education.
-
High school roundup: Rosini pin lifts Ironmen over Tigers
DANVILLE -- Steven Rosini's pin over Connor Houseknecht in 37 seconds in the final bout of the day at 132 pounds prevented disaster for Danville as the Ironmen pulled out a 40-36 Heartland Athletic Conference crossover victory on Tuesday.
- More News Headlines
-
Cases involving gas station drug sales advance to Montour County Court







