Saturday, December 12, 2009

Junta for Progressive Action, Adult Education

A recent Yale Daily News article treated adult education for immigrants in New Haven, including GED classes offered in Spanish through a partnership between New Haven's Adult and Continuing Education program and Junta for Progressive Action.

Junta and its executive director, Sandra Trevino, participate in the Greater New Haven Literacy Coalition.

http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/city-news/2009/12/04/junta-supports-spanish-geds/

http://www.juntainc.org/

http://www.newhavenindependent.org/archives/2009/11/literacy_coalit_1.php

The Greater New Haven Literacy Coalition recently held a Literacy Forum at the new Literacy Resource Center at 4 Science Park in Newhallville.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Read to Grow with Edward M. Kennedy Jr.

Read to Grow, whose executive director Susanne Santangelo is a Greater New Haven Literacy Coalition board member, held its annual luncheon on November 13. This year's event featured Edward M. Kennedy Jr.

A New Haven Register article appeared the next day:

"Kennedy Recalled at Literacy Group's Annual Luncheon"
http://www.nhregister.com/articles/2009/11/14/news/new_haven/a3-neread.txt

For more on Read to Grow's early literacy work, see:
http://www.readtogrow.org/

Monday, November 9, 2009

Literacy News

* Tomas Miranda received a Hispanic Leadership in Education award from the Hispanic Professional Network of Connecticut in September 2009.

* Junta for Progressive Action marked its 40th anniversary at an October 2 event and was featured in a New Haven Register article:

http://www.nhregister.com/articles/2009/10/05/news/new_haven/a1_mon_junta40.txt

* An October 29 Literacy Forum (previewed in an October 18 post to this blog) was described in New Haven Independent and New Haven Register articles below:

http://www.newhavenindependent.org/archives/2009/11/literacy_coalit_1.php

http://www.nhregister.com/articles/2009/10/26/life/announcements/doc4ae5849ac2e15633638488.txt

* Read to Grow and R.J. Julia Booksellers have been selected to receive the Clifford W. Beers "Kids Are Our Business" service award on November 20. Also, Read to Grow will host Ted Kennedy Jr. as speaker at its annual luncheon on November 13.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Thursday, 10/29 Literacy Forum

Margie Gillis of Haskins Laboratories and Literacy How, Inc. will be the featured speaker at a Literacy Forum on Thursday, October 29.

Her topic:
"Bringing Research into the Classroom, One Teacher at a Time"

coffee 8:00 a.m.
discussion 8:30-10 a.m.

Literacy Resource Center
4 Science Park
New Haven 06511

All are invited; RSVP to:
info@gnhliteracy.org

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Amelia Earhart, "Breathe the Sky" novel

With publicity growing about a Mira Nair movie about Amelia Earhart, I am looking forward to reading a new novel about Earhart by Chandra Prasad. The book is called "Breathe the Sky":

http://www.chandraprasad.com/Breathe_the_Sky.php

Having read a couple of other books Chandra Prasad has written, I'm confident the latest work by this New Haven-area author will appeal to many readers, too.

--Josiah Brown

Monday, September 7, 2009

International Literacy Day, September 8 -- and Local Reading

Tomorrow is International Literacy Day, as Maureen Wagner reminded Literacy Coalition colleagues. From the UNESCO website:

"This year, International Literacy Day will put the spotlight on the empowering role of literacy and its importance for participation, citizenship and social development. Literacy and Empowerment is the theme for the 2009-2010 biennium of the United Nations Literacy Decade."
http://www.unesco.org/en/literacy/advocacy/international-literacy-day/

. . .
Here in New Haven, Schools Superintendent Reginald Mayo said in a visit with kindergarteners last week:

“Boys and girls, we want you to be successful. The way that you do that, is ... you have to read, read, and continue reading. . . . You need to turn the TV off and — what? — read, read, read,” he said. “If you read, you will go to college, and you will be successful.”
. . .
Courtesy Melissa Bailey's September 4 article in the New Haven Independent and Elizabeth Benton's September 5 article in the New Haven Register:

http://www.newhavenindependent.org/archives/2009/09/class_of_2026_g.php

http://www.nhregister.com/articles/2009/09/05/news/new_haven/a1_--_kindergarten.txt

Monday, August 31, 2009

August Fiction and Non-Fiction

On the eve of September, here's an update on recent summer reading, including one work of fiction and two of non-fiction.

Both my wife and I found Jhumpa Lahiri's latest collection of short stories, "Unaccustomed Earth," hard to put down but ultimately less satisfying than her superb earlier collection, "Interpreter of Maladies." (In between, her novel "The Namesake" was also impressive and made into a movie starring Kal Penn.)

Paul Tough's "Whatever It Takes" profiles Geoffrey Canada and his leadership of the Harlem Children's Zone. The author had visited New Haven in May to benefit All Our Kin. He illuminates the promise, lessons, costs, and context of Geoffrey Canada's ambitious social and educational venture.

Among the researchers Tough discusses is Joseph K. Torgesen, whose findings on the value of early intervention with struggling readers merit wider attention. Some information on Torgesen's work appears here:
*http://www.fcrr.org/science/sciencePublicationsTorgesen.htm
*http://www.readingrockets.org/article/225

Richard Nisbett's "Intelligence and How to Get It: Why Schools and Cultures Count" is a compelling counter -- as Derek Bok and William Bowen's "The Shape of the River" had been -- to Charles Murray and Richard Herrnstein's "The Bell Curve." Nisbett's book deserves a broad audience. He distills a considerable review of research into a cogent argument for nurturing child development and student learning.

Best wishes to students and educators for the new academic year. . .

Josiah Brown
for the Greater New Haven Literacy Coalition

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Summer Days, Readers and Bloggers to Come

The Greater New Haven Literacy Coalition is working over the summer to update its website and in the fall will be featuring the reading recommendations and ruminations of area authors, among others.

In the meantime, amid various non-fiction readings, let me suggest the short fiction of William Trevor, several of whose stories I read over the weekend.

Josiah Brown, for the Literacy Coalition

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Reading Poetry, Arts and Ideas

Tomorrow -- Monday, June 22 -- is the deadline to let Literacy Volunteers of Greater New Haven know if you wish to participate in reading a poem this Thursday, June 25 as part of its collaboration with the International Festival of Arts and Ideas. The June 25 event will be at the new Literacy Resource Center at 4 Science Park in New Haven.

This is a local example of the Favorite Poem Project that former U.S. poet laureate Robert Pinsky launched, with related books listed here: http://www.favoritepoem.org/bookAndDvd.html

Contact Literacy Volunteers at 776-5899 or info@lvagnh.org

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Welcome to the Literacy Coalition's Book Blog

The Greater New Haven Literacy Coalition, an all-volunteer organization, is launching this blog as part of its mission to promote, support, and advance literacy in our region. The blog complements Cheryl Manciero's monthly New Haven Register column, Reading Along.

We invite readers to tell us about books they're reading, recommending, delighting in, deploring, learning from, teaching with, laughing about -- whatever may be the case.

To get us started: I most recently read J.M. Coetzee's Diary of a Bad Year, which was disappointing -- inferior to Waiting for the Barbarians and Disgrace, the two other of his novels that I'd read, years before. I would recommend those other two and still plan to explore his fictionalized memoirs about his childhood and youth.

I am currently reading Migrant Imaginaries, by Alicia Schmidt Camacho of the Yale faculty (also a board member at Junta for Progressive Action), and Toward Excellence with Equity, by Ronald Ferguson, who studies achievement gaps. I've just begun the first and have read a few chapters of the second.

In February, I read The Most Famous Man in America, by New Haven's own Debby Applegate, about Henry Ward Beecher. Beyond her treatment of debates over slavery and abolition, the Civil War and Reconstruction, her vivid portrayal of 19th-century media culture, popular religion, commerce, sin, and redemption resonates as the U.S. reckons with the costs and consequences of another, even more gilded age. Beecher's family -- including his sister Harriet Beecher Stowe -- and characters ranging from Lincoln and Victoria Woodhull to Twain and Whitman are part of the book's appeal. Debby Applegate writes, for example, of Beecher and Whitman: "Both men shared a bottomless enthusiasm for New York, with its vast variety and primal energy, and both insisted that love was the only meaningful bond between the heterogeneous human atoms and the great cosmos."

Of local interest, she recounts how Beecher's father, Lyman Beecher, sent young Henry to Amherst College rather than Yale partly because he "regarded[ed] his safety greater in Amherst than in New Haven," where Yale was susceptible to the "Southern influence" of "honor and spirit." This, in the author's words, "often led to dueling, gambling, and other dangerous hobbies that could easily corrupt his impressionable boy." (Amherst tuition also was a relatively inexpensive $40 per semester, with board $1.50 a week.)

In March, the work of another New Haven author -- Jennifer Baszile -- drew me. Her The Black Girl Next Door combines powerful insights about social class, family, and race with sharply witty observations about adolescence and the humorous juxtapositions of life. Hers is such a personal book that any quotation would lack context; do read it for yourself.

Thanks to the New Haven Free Public Library, recently my wife and I have been reading various books to our children, ages three and and one. Among the titles: Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House in the Big Woods and, now, Little House on the Prairie.

That's plenty for this blog's initial post. Now let's invite neighbors of all ages -- anyone who is interested, from the home, school or workplace, the private, public, or nonprofit sectors -- to tell us what you're reading. Later this spring, with the approach of the Arts and Ideas Festival in June, we'll especially encourage discussion of poetry in connection with the "Favorite Poem Project."

Happy reading,

Josiah Brown, for the Greater New Haven Literacy Coalition