Welcome to Our Lady of Mercy Elementary School's 89th year!
I'm looking forward to working with the students and teachers as we foster a love of reading.
Open House August 28, 2015
Please visit Our Lady of Mercy School on Sunday, August 28th,
for an open house. Check out the campus (classrooms, computer lab,
library, etc.) and enjoy a hearty lunch. (Tickets for the lunch are
available in the office).
Thank You!
Thanks to all who donated books to the library.
Your generosity is greatly appreciated.
Safe Environment Training
If
you intend to volunteer in any capacity at Our Lady of Mercy School
where you will have contact with children, you are required to
participate in a Safe Environment Training session and be finger
printed. This includes volunteering in the library for the book fairs. If you participated in the training last year, you do not have attend safe environment training
this year. However, if you did not have safe environment training last
year or you are new to Our Lady of Mercy School, you must attend Safe Environment Training this year. There will be a training session on Wednesday, August 10th at 6:00pm in the auditorium. Remember, ALL VOLUNTEERS must attend a Safe Environment Training session. If you have any questions, please contact Mrs. Blackburn.
Here are a few thoughts on reading books (not electronic devices) with and to your children and grandchildren:
Read to
your child(ren) every day.
He’s
building his vocabulary and imagination, while mom scores cuddle time and helps
calm him. Story time is a win-win all around.
Whether
it’s a classic such as Where the Wild Things Are or a new
bestseller like The Rabbit Who Wants to Fall Asleep,
bedtime stories have always been a big hit with little kids.
They’re a
hit with moms, dads, and educators too, thanks to the awesome brain and behavioral outcomes
they offer. Reams of studies link reading aloud to kids with academic success,
creativity, and a stronger bond between parents and their offspring.
But it’s
only recently that science has started looking into why books promote these
benefits. One recent study from Psychological
Science suggests that being read to builds a child’s vocabulary, and
that in turn makes her more prepared to learn to read in the future.
Study
authors evaluated the types and variety of words in 100 picture books and then
compared them to the words toddlers and preschoolers use and hear when
communicating with their parents and caregivers.
“Our study
found that the books contained more unique words,” study coauthor Jessica
Montag, assistant research psychologist at the University of California
Riverside, tells Yahoo Parenting.
The
thinking is, “the more unique words kids are exposed to when they’re very
young, the bigger their own vocabulary gets — and that makes it easier to learn
to read.” Previous studies have shown that the faster they pick up reading, the
more academically successful they can be.
Another
study out last month linked story time to a boost in brainpower. Researchers
from Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center found that kids ages 3 to 5
whose parents read to them at home and had more reading materials in their
house demonstrated more brain activity in the left side of the brain.
What’s that
mean? The left side is where word comprehension, language, and imagery are
processed. The study suggests that the more kids are read to, the more
connections they make between words and objects. These new connections
literally change their brain, preparing them academically and socially, Tzipi
Horowitz-Kraus, study coauthor and program director of the Reading and Literacy
Discovery Center at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, told Yahoo
Parenting earlier this month.
Story time
has nonacademic benefits, too. Reading helps relax kids (hence the point of
reading to them at bedtime), and the close physical interaction of lying on or
near a parent helps them feel secure and connected.
For all
these reasons, the American Academy of Pediatrics
recommends that moms and dads begin reading to kids when they are infants,
setting aside a special time (even for just a few minutes), cuddling up, and
letting little ones select the book to read from (kids love to make choices).
As for what
to read at bedtime, “a variety of books that feature a diversity of words is
good, but given how important it is to help build language skills in kids, the
best book is the one your child wants to listen to,” says Montag.
A few suggestions from Yahoo Parenting: Goodnight Moon, Llama
Llama Red Pajama, Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes, How Do
Dinosaurs Say Goodnight?, and All the Ways I Love You