ELL News Headlines
Throughout the week, Colorín Colorado gathers news headlines related to English language learners from around the country. The ELL Headlines are posted Monday through Friday and are available for free!
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Parkland Students Want to Know: Will the Shooting at Their School Change Gun Laws?
Students and community members grieving the largest mass shooting at an American high school express a common sentiment that’s as much a challenge as it is a prediction: Nothing will change. Now grief and anger are driving students in Parkland to ask tough questions of the adults responsible for protecting them.
Navajo President: Go To College, Then Bring That Knowledge Home
Tommy Rock has had three graduations — high school, college and graduate school. And no one from his family was there — no one to cheer for him, no one to take his picture. And when he came home to Monument Valley, few really cared. After Rock graduated from high school, he did what everyone else did in Monument Valley: He worked in the tourism industry. But he had his sights set on college.
A Mister Rogers Postage Stamp, and a Legacy That’s Anything but Make-Believe
In the over three decades he hosted the children's television show "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood,' Fred Rogers conveyed virtue and kindness with his signature zippered cardigans and puppet friends. Next month, the United States Postal Service will immortalize Mr. Rogers, who died of cancer in 2003, alongside cultural and political icons such as Elvis, Big Bird and former presidents, when it introduces a Forever postage stamp with his portrait.
Florida Shooting: Superintendent Has 'No Words That Can Describe the Heartache'
Robert Runcie, the superintendent in Broward County, Fla., had just finished a big celebration—handing the keys of a new Toyota Camry to his school district's teacher of the year—when the barrage of urgent text messages started.
Texas Illegally Excluded Thousands from Special Education, Federal Officials Say
For years, Texas education officials illegally led schools across the state to deny therapy, tutoring and counseling to tens of thousands of children with disabilities, the federal government said Thursday. In a letter to the Texas Education Agency, which oversees education in the state, regulators from the federal Department of Education said the state agency’s decision to set a "target" for the maximum percentage of students who should receive special education services had violated federal laws requiring schools to serve all students with disabilities.
Winners of 2018 American Indian Library Association's Youth Literature Award
Every two years, the American Indian Library Association's Youth Literature Award committee selects books to receive its awards in three categories: Picture Book, Middle Grade Book, and Young Adult Book. From books published in 2016 and 2017, these are the winners – all of which were published by small presses.
Being an English-Language Learner Is Hard. Here Are 5 Ways Teachers Can Make It Easier
Award-winning teacher Justin Minkel writes, "There are plenty of hard things about school for all kids. Too many tests, too much sitting, too little recess. But for English learners, there is an added layer of difficulty. The constant effort to understand and make yourself understood can be exhausting. All 25 of my students speak either Spanish or Marshallese at home. Here are five ways I've found to make school a little easier for them."
Penguin Young Readers Announces Imprint for Diverse Books
Penguin Young Readers has announced the launch of a new imprint, called Kokila, that will focus on diverse books for children and young adults. According to Penguin, the imprint's mission is to "add depth and nuance to the way children and young adults see the world and their place in it."
With DACA in Limbo, Teachers Protected by the Program Gird for the Worst
Karen Reyes spends her days teaching a group of deaf toddlers at Lucy Read Pre-Kindergarten School in Austin, Tex., how to understand a world they cannot hear. For the first time in her four-year teaching career, Ms. Reyes, 29, is at a loss. One of nearly 9,000 educators protected under the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, Ms. Reyes has struggled to explain to her students, through sign language and pictures, the uncertainty of her future.
What the Screen Time Experts Do with Their Own Kids
Parents today struggle to set screen time guidelines. One big reason is a lack of role models. Grandma doesn't have any tried-and-true sayings about iPad time. This stuff is just too new. But many experts on kids and media are also parents themselves. So when I was interviewing dozens of them for my book The Art of Screen Time, I asked them how they made screen time rules at home. None of them held themselves up as paragons, but it was interesting to see how the priorities they focused on in their own research corresponded with the priorities they set at home.