During the month of March, newspapers across America will
celebrate Newspapers In Education Week or Month.
Each year, the first week of March is designated as
Newspapers In Education Week. Many
newspapers across America choose to extend the celebration throughout the
month. NIE teachers are encouraged to spend at least one complete school day
teaching subjects only using their local newspaper as the textbook. The goal of the week or month long
celebration is to reinforce a positive and relevant lifetime reading habit in
students by engaging them with an authentic text - their local newspaper.
The Newspaper Association of America Foundation has
created an NIE curriculum teacher's guide entitled "Critical Thinking
Through Core Curriculum Using Print and Digital Newspapers".
The teacher's guide, which is aligned with national
learning standards, features a five-subject approach that takes advantage of
the wide range of topics covered by newspapers. Topics include financial literacy, nutrition, the
environment, character education and information technology. Lessons within the
guide can be taught individually or as a unit.
The guide provides an opportunity to teach critical
thinking through subjects that will be vital to students' success as
adults. In the age of Web sites,
blogs and social networking, critical thinking is more important than
ever. Everything on the Internet
looks authoritative thanks to do-it-yourself templates and software, while
blogs, citizen news sites and social networks add to the confusion.
All of these information sources make it even more
important for students to be able to weigh the merits of information, draw
comparisons, sift competing interests and make judgments on the reliability and
track records of sources.
Because newspapers cover a wide range of topics, they
provide myriad opportunities to develop students' critical thinking skills in
areas that interest them and will affect them for life.
Newspapers In Education gets students into the reading
habit and thus creates conversant and capable readers in our country. Educators acknowledge that newspapers
help bridge the gap between school and the community.
The newspaper is a "living textbook" for
everyday use in the classroom or at home.
It is crucial that students are aware of what is going on around them,
and the newspaper can facilitate this ultimately contributing to a student's
well-rounded education.
Newspapers In Education is an investment in the future
for our youth's lives everyday.
The Newport Plain Talk Newspapers In Education program is
a non-profit literacy program for the community. The Newport Plain Talk is delivered weekly, free of charge,
to area schools or other area educational programs due to the generosity of
community sponsors.
For more information about Newspapers In Education
contact Lu Shep Baldwin at 423-506-5980 or lushep.baldwin@jonesmedia.biz.
Jones Media is the parent company for The Newport Plain
Talk