Should Reading and Spelling be Taught at the Same Time?

Taken from http://blog.allaboutlearningpress.com/why-we-teach-reading-and-spelling-separately/

Why We Teach Reading and Spelling Separately

Some things just go together.

You know…like spaghetti and meatballs, salt and pepper, and Snoopy and Woodstock.

Or like reading and spelling.

But wait…should reading and spelling really be taught together? As strange as it may seem…

I recommend that reading and spelling not be taught in the same lesson.

Would you like to know why?

Art as a Family Affair—The Legacy of the Wyeths

Published with Permission
Written by Pat Knepley
www.TOSMagazine.com

 

No other family has had quite the impact on the twentieth century American art scene as have the Wyeths. N. C. Wyeth (Newell Convers Wyeth) the patriarch, was born in 1882 and studied art and drafting at the Mechanic Arts School in Boston and some other institutions in Massachusetts. In 1902 he traveled to the Philadelphia suburb of Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, to study with the great Father of Illustration, Howard Pyle. N.C. stayed in Chadds Ford for the remainder of his life, dividing his time between his home there and a vacation home in Maine.

N.C., who was called Convers by friends, followed in his teacher’s footsteps to become one of our country’s greatest illustrators. Illustrators are those who create art for publication, such as for books, magazines, or in advertising. Illustrators are hired for a very specific project, called a commission, and one of N.C. Wyeth’s first commissions was to create a cover for the Saturday Evening Post, which in 1903 a very popular magazine.

N.C. Wyeth is probably best known for his amazing illustrations for classic children’s literature. His most important commission came in 1911 from Charles Scribner’s Sons publishing house, to illustrate Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island. After the enormous popularity of this first book, N.C. enjoyed a long career illustrating classics for Scribner’s as well as other publishers. To see some illustrations by N.C. Wyeth, visit this website. [http://www.bpib.com/illustrat/wyeth.htm]   (more…)

Miss America’s Outstanding Teen is a Homeschooler

On August 17, 2013, Miss Florida’s Outstanding Teen, Leah Sykes, a home schooled student from Jacksonville, FL, was crowned Miss America’s Outstanding Teen 2014, at the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando.

Miss America’s Outstanding Teen is the “little sister” organization of the Miss America Scholarship Organization.

For the talent portion of the competition, Leah performed a vocal to “Someone Like You” by Adele.

Along with the title of Miss America’s Outstanding Teen 2014, Leah won a $25,000 scholarship subsidized by the Rosen Centre Hotel to continue her education.

Now Leah will travel the country speaking to audiences about her platform, “Seeing Beyond Disabilities”, and acting as the teen ambassador for Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals, a non-profit organization dedicated to saving and improving the lives of children by raising funds for children’s hospitals. Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals is the national platform of the Miss America’s Outstanding Teen Organization.

Fore more information, visit www.MAOTeen.org.