Parent Brief
Antavia Hamilton-Ochs
Project Running Out of Time
Dr. Mike Robinson, host of Parent Talk Live discussed literacy with Antavia Hamilton-Ochs a 9th grade teacher at Bartlett High School in Anchorage, AK and how her new project Running Out of Time: Emergency Literacy Intervention Requires Upgraded Technology will assist students to achieve in reading on today’s episode of Parent Brief.
Antavia Hamilton-Ochs is a 37 year old English teacher from Anchorage, Alaska. She has been teaching for three years at a high poverty school. She enjoys world travel, cooking, the outdoors, family, and people. She is married and has a teen-aged daughter.
Antavia Hamilton-Ochs is a 37 year old English teacher from Anchorage, Alaska. She has been teaching for three years at a high poverty school. She enjoys world travel, cooking, the outdoors, family, and people. She is married and has a teen-aged daughter.
Hello Dr. Robinson,
Just in case you ever have a need to share it in your area, here's the link to the specific program I'm trying to bring in to my classroom: http://www.voyagersopris.com/curriculum/subject/literacy/language-live
We are currently using Language! by the same company. It is doing extremely well at the elementary school level. At high school is slowly gaining momentum. The issue at high school level was implementation, in my opinion, not the program. I've been working with the program and I think it is solid, but the computer integrated program makes more sense at the high school level.
Regards,
Antavia
Just in case you ever have a need to share it in your area, here's the link to the specific program I'm trying to bring in to my classroom: http://www.voyagersopris.com/curriculum/subject/literacy/language-live
We are currently using Language! by the same company. It is doing extremely well at the elementary school level. At high school is slowly gaining momentum. The issue at high school level was implementation, in my opinion, not the program. I've been working with the program and I think it is solid, but the computer integrated program makes more sense at the high school level.
Regards,
Antavia