READING continued from page 12 technology enables researchers to study the developing nervous system in ways not possible before. The in stitute funded the Yale and Harvard studies. "Both studies clearly indicate that stimulation of a particular type will not only influence brain develop ment, but influence learning," he said. "Clearly what the Harvard study shows is that early experience really does matter," he said. "The prema ture infant care environment in that study really produced some brain changes that are pretty substantial." The results of the reading study are particularly important, he said, be cause they support the growing con viction that many school reading programs may be ineffective, and that colleges of education often fail to provide teachers with the latest findings of how neuroscience can improve teaching methods. "What we're seeing is that most of the kids who come to school at risk for reading failure, that that failure is not set in stone," Lyon said. "But it does require that we bring to bear the interventions that are scientifical ly based and found to be effective." Humans have used speech for tens of thousands of years, and children easily learn it by listening to people talk. But reading is relatively mod em, only about 5,000 to 6,000 years old, and it has to be taught. Yet read ing has become crucial to almost every aspect of modem society. A national reading panel mandat ed by Congress reported in 2000 that there was sufficient scientific knowl edge to justify a core curriculum for teaching reading. "We know that there are five im portant elements in teaching a child to read," said Sally Shaywitz, a panel member. "1 low do the lines and circles on a page not just re main squiggles? How do they take on meaning? They have to connect to something that already has meaning and that's the individual sounds of spoken language, the phonemes. "It's getting from the sounds of spoken words to learning how letters represent sounds," she said. "If they hear a word, they need to be able to pull apart the word into its individ ual sounds, so that they appreciate, for example, that the word bat' has three sounds, b-a-t." According to the national panel, children need to learn: That words are made up of individual sounds; that letters represent sounds (phon ics); how to read words accurately and rapidly; how to develop a vocab ulary; and strategies for compre hending what is read. In Shaywitz's study of children aged 6 to 9 years, 37 poor readers were taught to read using a curricu lum based on the new principles, 12 poor readers received standard in struction and 29 good readers served as controls. The curriculum based on science is more systematic, seeking to lay down each of the important reading skills in an organized fashion, Sally Shaywitz said. Common approach es to teaching reading in schools are "much more chaotic and haphaz ard," she said. Poor readers given the scientifical ly based instruction pulled way ahead in reading compared with those given standard instruction, but the most dramatic changes occurred in their brains. (c) 2004, Chicago tribune. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. Your Summer Check out the September Experience Program September 7-17, 2004 • Short on group requirements? • Looking for a unique way to wrap up your summer? • Want to get ahead in your course of study? • Excited to get back in the swing of classes? • Does $500 for 4 credits sound like a deal to you? If you answered “yes” to any of these questions, you need to find out more about the September Experience Program. Resident and nonresident students take one course for 4 credits in nine days for just $500. All are group satisfying! Classes meet from 8:00 a.m. to 11:50 a.m. Monday - Friday. We have the courses you want, the courses you need, and the courses you should take. Courses are included in Summer 04 DuckHunt. 019163 temam* Course Tftlg MfeHStgr_CRM ANTH161 World Cultures P. Scher 45407 ANTH 170 Intro to Human Origins G. Nelson 45366 GEOG 206 Geography of Oregon M. Power 45365 HIST 382 Latin America C. Aguirre 45364 INTL350 International Leadership K. Carpenter 45361 PSY 330 Thinking H. Arrow 45363 PSY 375 Development J. Measeile 45362 SOC 301 American Society M. Dreilling 45370 UNIVERSITY OF OREGON SUMMER SESSION SEPTEMBER EXPERIENCE PROGRAM Register using DuckWeb . Visit our Summer Session web site, ; call us, 346-3475, or send us email, Tim Bobosky Photographer Jey Strangfeld, a negotiator for the Graduate Teaching Fellows Federation, discusses negotiations for the GTFF contract at a meeting last Friday morning. STRIKE continued from page 1 Director of Human Resources Lin da King, the lead negotiator for the University's bargaining team, said she was confident the issue would be resolved and a strike would be averted. "I'm really hopeful that we'll reach an agreement before it gets to that point," she said. At the meeting Tuesday, the Exec utive Council appeared adamant about keeping the stipulation out of the contract, lessening the chances that an agreement would be reached anytime soon. "I don't know how I could sign (the contract) and not just feel like I shoved it up the GTFF's ass," Strangfeld said at Tuesday's meeting. The GTFF said it feels the stipula tion is an attempt by the University to get an upper hand on negotia tions when the contract reopens in two years. If the stipulation is to stand, the parties would have to ne gotiate from a $275 starting point for fees rather than the $230 tenta tively agreed upon for this contract. "It's a power play. They want to ensure that they're in a position of advantage," said Goff, adding that, "It's not matter of money; It's a mat ter of principle." GTFF negotiator David Cecil said that if the stipulation stands, the GTFF will have to ask for the fee sub sidies again, making it more difficult for it to get the wage increase it wants. King said she was uncomfortable discussing the stipulation issue be cause both sides are still bargaining it. "I don't want to get into all the points that are being bargained," she said. But King said such stipulations are not unusual in contracts and added that the stipulation will make nego tiations "more flexible" in 2006. "The University is interested in not tying its hands when in two years we may have more options," she said. The union and the University are still debating three additional issues, according to the GTFF. The first is whether the University should be able to hire graduate students with out making them GTFs, a practice that is currently allowed. The second issue is whether masters students can be made level 2 GTFs. Level 2 GTFs get higher pay than level 1 GTFs. The University maintains the position that only doctorate stu- ‘ dents can be made level 2 GTFs, but the GTFF wants to establish different criteria for determining who can be come a level 2 GTF. The third issue still in debate is University subsidies for student fees. The GTFF said it be lieves fees should by fully subsi dized, but the University has only offered them subsidies of $45 per term so far. Contact the people/culture/faith reporter • at moriahbalingit@daityemerald.com. CAMPUS BUZZ Friday German Music and Culture Symposium, Browsing Room, Knight Library, 4-6 p.m. Freeman Lecture by len Ang, professor of cultural studies and director of the Centre for Cultural Re search at the University of West Sydney, entitled “The Predicament of Diversity: Presenting 'Asian Art’ in the Art Museum,” Alumni Lounge, Ger linger Hall, 7 p.m. Oregon Ballroom Dance, Room 220, Gerlinger Hall, 7:30-11:30 p.m. University Theatre performance of "Much Ado About Nothing,” Friday & Saturday, Robinson The atre, 8 p.m. The Jazz Cafe, Room 178, Music Building, 8 p.m. Saturday Traditional cedar-working demonstrations, Glenn Starlin Courtyard, Museum of Natural History, 1-4 p.m. Premier Travel r.urail Passes issued on-site!!! E-niau: fares©luv2travel.com 1011 Harlow 1747-0909^^ ^Student Travel Experts Today’s crossword solution mninmriinBnnniinBramrafiniin cIlJaIsIsJi 1 fITTe IdTs Find fun stuff in the ODE Classifieds: Comics, your daily horoscope, and, of course, the crossword.