NC K-3 early-literacy skills exceed the rest of the country | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the Carolina Journal. The author of this post is Theresa Opeka.

    Children in grades K-3 in North Carolina have surpassed the rest of the nation when it comes to their early-literacy skills. That's according to N.C. Superintendent of Public Instruction Catherine Truitt, who shared the news at Tuesday's Council of State meeting.

    The results were based on a reading diagnostic test given in all 50 states.

    "This is due to the incredibly hard work of our K-3 teachers who have been undergoing a very intense 18-month professional development, referred to as Letters Training, that is essentially a return to a phonics-based approach to early literacy instruction," she said. "This is a topic that is being discussed nationally, as 20 states right now have passed legislation, on the heels of Mississippi and North Carolina, to require some kind of curriculum mandate. In the case of North Carolina, a professional development mandate to ensure that our students are learning how to read given the fact that before the pandemic, about 36% of our 8th graders were starting high school reading proficiently."

    Truitt said this could not have come soon enough.

    She also said the State Board of Education would be hearing from her Office of Learning Recovery & Acceleration this week that they are seeing the largest gains in recovery in middle-grade math and elementary reading but not in middle-school reading. Truitt said they would work on policies in the coming year with middle school teachers to help their students.

    Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson said he wanted to give kudos to Truitt and her staff at DPI for all the great work they have done.

    Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper said he agreed that everyone needs to work on improving public education and was glad to hear the positive results from Truitt. However, it was important to note, he said, that the state received a $5 billion investment from the federal government to help pay for summer school.

    "To help us pay these teachers and educators across our schools, recognizing that if you make a strong investment in public schools, you can get a good return on learning, so that's something that we should keep in mind," Cooper said.

    The good news about new businesses in the state continued, with Secretary of State Elaine Marshall saying 60,000 to 61,000 new businesses were created from January to April, compared to 39,000 during the same period in 2020.

    Her office also completed a record number of annual report filings between January and April, with more than 461,000. She said that is nearly 50,000 more than last year and 127,000 more than 2020.

    State Auditor Beth Wood praised the N.C. Department of Transportation for implementing all her office's recommendations from a 2020 audit. She touched on an audit released last week that had no findings for the department.

    NCDOT overspent its budget by $742 million. The department planned to spend $5.94 billion in 2019, but exceeded that amount by more than 12%, according to a 2020 report by Wood. Transportation officials overspent because they didn't base their budget on actual cost estimates for projects. The department also failed to monitor or enforce its spending plan at DOT's 14 highway divisions.

    "I don't get that opportunity often in a follow-up performance audit, so kudos to Secretary (J. Eric) Boyette and his staff and the great job they've done to implement all the recommendations that were so critical and so necessary that have prevented the issue that happened in 2019," Wood said.

HbAD0

    State Treasurer Dale Folwell thanked the state Senate for unanimously passing S.B. 321, the Medical Debt De-Weaponization Act, on Monday. He called it a "pro-family, pro-consumer piece of legislation."

    "It not only protects the living but also protects those surviving widows and widowers whose decedent has run up tremendous medical bills, and they themselves have had their credit rating destroyed because of things associated with medical debt," he said. "This is something that's on the minds and the hearts of the consumers of North Carolina, and we look forward to the bill getting to your desk so that consumers can be protected from medical debt."

    The Senate Health Care Committee held a discussion last month on the bill, and members hoped that the second time would be the charm.

    The bill is similar to H.B. 1039, also known as the Medical Debt De-Weaponization Act, which stalled out in a House Banking Committee hearing last June.
Go Back

HbAD1

Latest State and Federal

A ship that sank into the depths of Lake Michigan in 1881 has been discovered by shipwreck hunters, who described the ship as being like “a time capsule” into the past because of how well it has survived over the years.
Special counsel Jack Smith has asked the federal judge overseeing the criminal case against former President Donald Trump in Washington, D.C., to impose a “narrowly tailored” gag order on the former president
The total number of missing people from the devastating Maui wildfires last month remains near 400 even as Hawaii Governor Josh Green said that he believed the number would drop below 100.
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said during an interview this week that he believes former President Barack Obama is the person who is running the Biden administration.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis bucked an offer from President Joe Biden this week to meet in Florida following Hurricane Idalia because the security protections that Biden would require would shut down recovery efforts.
Twenty-two state attorneys general, led by Tennessee’s Jonathan Skrmetti, are warning financial services companies that they may be violating antitrust and consumer protection laws by engaging in a climate activist alliance aimed at achieving net zero carbon emissions.
During the current period where COVID-19 cases are increasing, treatment is readily available and appropriate for the majority of North Carolinians.
Hunter Biden’s legal team on Wednesday filed a lawsuit against a former Trump White House staffer, accusing him of violating California and federal computer privacy laws by publishing thousands of photos and emails from the infamous laptop belonging to the president’s son.

HbAD2

 
Back to Top