Cool Literacy Support images
A few nice literacy support images I found:
Thank you for your attention,This blog is about & educating a baby. Meet 1st grader Srey Touch and already an inspiration
!!about literacy support tips :Both parents should put the baby down for naps, feed her and change her. The more family resources she has, the more secure she will feel.
Wonderful literacy support:
Image by cambodia4kidsorg
Srey Touch’s Story
When Srey Touch she was 17 months old, her mother appeared at the gate of the Sharing Foundation’s Roteang Orphange with her starving daughter. Lao Pov said that she had just buried Touch’s twin sister underneath their thatch hut out in back of Roteang Village. The baby had died of malnutrition and she feared Srey Touch would too. Srey Touch was in very bad condition, and she was admitted to our orphanage “hospital room” with her mom and gradually fed back to health. Her mom received lots of support and counseling from our head nanny, Dany. After a few months, mom and baby went back home with weekly formula and rice supplied.
Srey Touch, 6,is a happy, energetic little girl who is in her second year at the Sharing Foundation’s Khmer Literacy School in Roteang Village. This year, given her improved literacy skills, she is also attending Grade 1 at the Village School. Her mother, Lao Pov, who is totally illiterate, is very proud of her daughter’s education and plans to keep her in school indefinitely. Her mom works on the Sharing Foundation’s farm project, and the income she earns is enough that she doesn’t need her daughter to work. Frequently, children in very poor families work in order to bolster the family’s income, and this prevents them from attending school.
Both Bora and Nhuong, young people from Cambodia, who are donors to this cause, know this story all too well:
As Bora says, "I don’t know what I can do as a single Cambodian citizen to help next generation of my country. But I know for sure that all of our contributions will make different. Our donation can help one child to go to school for the whole month.
vuthbora.blogspot.com/2008/01/new-year-welcoming-donation…
Nhung says,"I understand how difficult it is to obtain an education when you have no money and more importantly when food and clothing are scarce. For most children in Cambodia this is a story that is all too common. Most children are illiterate and work on the family farm. As the country industrializes and leaves behind the agrarian lifestyle, these children grow up to be migrant workers with nowhere to go. Unlike those children, I was lucky enough to come to America and receive an education. This is why this cause is important to me.
theasianeconomist.com/?p=6
Donate through our Global Giving Fundraising page
here
Your donation to the Sharing Foundation’s Global Giving Page will help many children like Srey Touch find a route out of poverty.
With and 10 minutes of your time, Sharing Foundation can win ,000 and you can help improve the lives of over 1,500 children in Cambodia, one of the world’s poorest countries.
Tell your friends to do the same!
The following not about literacy support,but classicA bad beginning makes a bad ending.There should be a better way to start a day than waking up every morning. Birth is much, but breeding is more..Don’t claim to know what you don’t know.。!!Advice :Make play-time green-time with greener toys,Get back to basics and try old fashioned wooden toys and organic cotton or homemade teddies. Because babies put most things in their mouths,go as natural as possible. The Library of Hattiesburg, Petal & Forrest County
Beautiful:

Image by davidking
I thought this was funny – what’s the point of having a textual sign for Literacy Support???
A few nice literacy support images I found:
!!Advice :The baby couture might be better replaced with convenient one-piece suits in practical white terry cloth. literacy seeds”"..
Beautiful:

Image by focus2capture
education, literacy basic need for better life..
THE NEED: support the orphanage
THE ACTION: participating in services
THE ORGANISATION: anugraha childrens home""
!!Reminded : Encourage your baby to allow herself to be held and interacted with by family, friends and neighbors. How A Bid Awarded Money For An Indirect Object Which Then Became A Subject, Then A Direct Object, In Syllepsis Shocker
Wonderful literacy support:

Image by judge_mental
LOTTERY LOSERS FUND ILLITERATE FLUOROCRATS
From P Dantic, Lincolnsheer redin an ritin corespondant
A common problem for pro-literacy organisations with tens of thousands of pounds in lottery losings to spend is finding even dumber people upon whom the money can be quickly wasted all over again.
Quite Literary, the Literature Newsletter of Lincolnshire County Council, simplifies their task, being quite blatantly the product of someone with no command of the English language at all.
QL wastes no time announcing that money has been received – for a "Writers Support Worker".
Her first task, I suspect, will be a research project into the genitive declension of adjectives.
Assuming there is a plurality of writers to support with even greater learning disabilities than the QL Editor, such research might lead to the discovery of the missing apostrophe in such phrases as Writers’ Support Worker, Writers’ Festival, and crime writers’ panel.
Crime indeed. The "Jan-April" issue of Quite Literary is missing six apostrophes in total.
Of these, five are missing from the word "writers" where they should have shown that something belongs to the writers.
So it seems that the headline "New Writers Group in Sleaford." is not a statement that Lincolnshire’s budding geniuses are presently huddled in that market town. Nor is it an instruction that they should do something like this.
The sixth and last missing apostrophe is reserved for "Lincolnshire authors day" which is also one of six occasions where capital initials would appear to have been carelessly abandoned.
Others include book titles. The rule seems to be that celebrated authors get capital initials for theirs, but "Nick’s new book ‘Muddlewitch does magic tricks’ " and poor Adam Hart-Davis’ uninquisitive work " ‘ Why does a ball bounce’ " only get one at the beginning.
You may be peering at my reproduction above of the newsletter’s use of single quotes to emphasise the titles of written or dramatic works.
They would be tiresome if employed with any consistency. They are even more so when they are not. It would be hard to go wrong quite so often with italics, but QL would probably find a way.
Having said this, the stylistic inconsistency is consistent throughout, with the use of full stops in headlines (seven with, four without) and various oddities of days and dates, including the disappointing news that the 2006 Lincoln Book Festival is being planned for "next year", i.e. 2007.
As the Council’s writers battle violently with their mothers’ tongue, an occasional rude charge of unnecessary capitals, such as "a short story anthology of work of Lincolnshire Writers" – offers a peep into the psyche of the literary apparatchik and what is important – "for the County". "To assist in this they are hopeful of receiving a Grant…from the European Funded Lincolnshire Creative Solutions Initiative" – although this county is a county equal to any other, the grant is no Mitchell, and the latest organisation to emerge from the Buzzwordbot is merely funded by Europeans.
We have seen how international fund-gathering merits extra capitals, the unviable local scribblers whose presence is required to justify it, fewer. What of the third category of subjects whose financial importance is vague, when it just isn’t clear to the Editor whether his superiors are expecting capitals or not? He hedges his bets and goes halves.
Thus we are "working with schools through the Extended school scheme", or having "a Crime quiz", lending the text a mildly Teutonic flavour.
Europeans flattered by this may be wondering what the Lincolnshire Creative Solutions Initiative’s creative solution really is.
It is that calling yourself LCSI definitely increases your chances of a donation, compared to just calling yourself Lincolnshire County Council.
Please don’t send money to these incompetent, officious buffoons, who imagine their four sides of A4 babble warrants an index. Think what damage they might do with it.
I found Quite Literary an immensely enjoyable read. Any department which can make well over 100 errors in a four page thrice-yearly literature newsletter is obviously the one to be awarded huge sums of quangocash, that it may propagate its ignorance to the plentiful supply of writers insecure enough to seek official counsel about their creativity.
Final score for QL issue 5
Missing apostrophes: 6
Missing commas: 2
Missing capital initials in titles: 6 (titles, not initials)
Missing close quotation mark: 1
Missing question mark: 1
Desperate formatting including ugly hyphens and hyphens in names: 28
Hyphen instead of "and": 1
Uncomfortable colon instead of "on": 1
Meaningless halts: commas, 1; full stops 1
Unnecessary capital letters: 6
Use of numerals in place of words: 3
Weak exclamation mark: 1
Cliches: 2 "rich tapestries"
Tautlogy: 1 "activity happening"
Sheer nonsense: 3 (two astonishing syllepses, one knotted officialese)
Preposition at the end of a sentence: 1
Precis! 5
Unreferenced and inconsistent use of abbreviations: 2
The wrong title: 1
The wrong name: 1
The wrong year: 1
Information missing altogether: 2
Crude idiom: 1
Plodding, repetitive style: 6
Unctuous gerund: 1
Inconsistent style in a) the use/absence of quotation marks instead of italics to highlight the titles of literary or dramatic works; b) full stops in headlines and c) days and dates: lots.
tips:Thank you for your attention,news book blog: & educating a baby.
!!
literacy support–: Who would support a Constitutional Amendment imposing a literacy test as a precondition to voting?
Each party claims to be smarter than the other so there should be bipartisan support for such an amendment. Kindly state: (1) party affiliation; and (2) whether you favor such a constitutional amendment.
The following is the answer: (Hint: The answer is not necessarily.)
Answer by grandma zaza
You damn right I would. I am a lifelong registered Democrat and a fiscal conservative. I am NOT a Liberal.
Answer by gentle giant 2
Conservative independent – and Yes! There should be a literacy test. Half the voters don;t know what they are votng for.
Answer by Shovel Ready
Heck, a citizenship test would be nice as well. Plus it would be helpful if the people voting are actually allive, and not residing in a nearby cemetery.
Answer by Derek R the East-Coast Élitist
I am a proud Liberal (though that’s an understatement), and yes, even you illiterate Republicans deserve the right to vote.
Stupid people deserve a say as well, even stupid people who vote Republican.
Answer by Love Life
If that were true then why do you loons want sarah palin to be a president? southern states need to get educated then.
Answer by Islam Delenda Est
I would definitely support such an amendment. I’m sick and tired of seeing idiots being interviewed after voting and proclaiming they voted for Candidate X because he “seems nice” or “has nice hair”, etc…
I’m a Republican
Answer by nostradamus02012
sorry, no.
you can’t discriminate against anyone – including those who can’t read.
i’m an independant and will happily switch party affiliation just as soon as one party or the other manages to earn my respect.
Answer by Anthony
1. Libertarian.
2. No. As I already said in your previous question, it was deemed unconstitutional already. I also do not support any regulations (except for age and citizenship) on allowing us to take part in our most important right. We all should have the right to take part in our government.
Answer by bwlobo
I think just having the voting in ENGLISH ONLY is sufficient. I also think the precondition to voting, is to be an American Citizen. You know, there may be some people who are U.S. Citizens, who don’t have a total grasp of the language yet. It doesn’t bother me if they need someone to interpret the ENGLISH for them. Some of the wording in Proposals are more like what a lawyer would try to speak. Heck, maybe I should ask for an interpreter the next time I vote… and I have a master’s degree in reading education!
I’m a conservative independent, and I wouldn’t favor your amendment.
Answer by honeybeejim
Yes 100% i also think voting age should be 25 to 65.
Add your own answer in the comments!
These are useful by me!,This blog is about and Newborn Baby Clothes.
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literacy support|Great Start receives ,000 literacy grant from Dawn Foods Foundation
The nonprofit Jackson County Great Start Collaborative has received ,000 from the Dawn Foods Foundation to support early literacy efforts. The grant will support Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library, which started in May 2008 in Jackson County and provides more than…
Read more onGreat Start receives ,000 literacy grant from Dawn Foods Foundation
What a fine story of survival. Lovely and inspiring to learn about this little twin, whose sister was lost in poverty.
I am thinking of my own twin granddaughters also age 6 now, and how much it really takes to raise two at a time. They are also survivors, with the problems of an early birth and difficult health. Born in a welfare state they are lucky to get the best treatment, care and nutrtion. I think they have already plenty of material goods, so I will donate some of the money I would otherwise spend for their luxury presents!
I’ll use the link provided for the Global giving fundraising above. And I’ll work on a blog post, too.
Thanks Beth for this story on Flickr
I just got 50% of it x)
Anyway, for a photo not the best subject. Or object? or indirect subject?…
No it’s not a good photo. But some things must be done. Your score of 50% is amazing, and more than most English people could manage. Using apostrophes properly in English these days is practically a matter of class war, and their nonexistence in German is probably very good for society. As for this bunch, all I can say is, die dümmsten Bauern ernten die dicksten Kartoffeln. Literally all.
My problem is not grammar but attention span! However, my heart is in the right place.