AdLit
AdLit is a national multimedia project offering information and resources to the parents and educators of struggling adolescent readers and writers. We are an education service of WETA, the flagship public broadcasting station in our nation’s capital.
Our MissionAccording to data from the U.S. Department of Education’s 2019 National Assessment of Educational Progress known as NAEP (or “the Nation’s Report Card”), only 34 percent of 8th graders read and write at a proficient level (that is, at a level deemed to be appropriate for their year in school).
And for low-income students, students of color, and students with disabilities, the statistics are even more alarming: just 20% of low-income students (eligible for the National School Lunch Program), 15% of Black students, 22% of Hispanic students, and 9% of students with disabilities were found to be proficient in reading.
Hundreds of school districts have introduced new programs designed to help struggling adolescent readers. Numerous professional associations and other national organizations have moved adolescent literacy to the top of the school reform agenda. Many of the nation’s top education researchers have launched new studies into topics such as how best to teach reading in the academic content areas, how best to teach writing at the high-school level, and how best to support the literacy development of adolescent English language learners. AdLit’s mission is to distill this literacy research and share best-practice information to as many people as possible through the power and reach of the Internet.
Note: The above comes directly from their website. Click here to read more.
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