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Someone out there reads all the letters to Santa
Each year, letters to Santa -- scribbled and sealed tight (children really seem to like glue) -- arrive at local post offices.
For more than 25 years in Fresno, postal workers have volunteered to open the wistful missives, sending a colorful form letter back from "your friend Santa." Sometimes they're moved by the lives of children who write.
Postal clerk Susan Ward, coordinator of the letter-opening effort, is surrounded by exuberant lists of untamed avarice as well as letters from children who expect few presents. This year, more letters than ever explain to Santa that parents have no money and it would be great if he could help out a little.
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Letters to sports 10/9
Arax gets bad rap
Per Andy Boogaard's article on the Bullard-Memorial recruiting war involving a ninth-grade player ("Stuck in the middle," Sunday Page C1), a few things were left unsaid. Central Section Commissioner Jim Crichlow said that Jesus Lozano, the player in question, was "totally innocent."
And then he suspended him for five games to teach others a lesson? Nice justice. Having never met Robert Vierra or the Lozano family, it would be unfair to comment.
The article, however, did make Bullard coach Don Arax look like an arrogant, win-at-all-costs, power-mad tyrant.
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DEREK BOUCHER: Testing program takes fun out of reading
Last week, a friend of our family came to us distraught after her child, a student in the Clovis Unified School District, read the adolescent favorite "The Name of This Book is Secret." Despite having a very positive experience with the book, she failed her school's Accelerated Reader comprehension test.
This resulted in a lowering of her English grade. Accelerated Reader is a popular, expensive commercial program used in many of our schools today. Last year, we learned of another child who was discouraged by a librarian from reading Hemingway's classic "The Old Man and the Sea" because it was considered too low for that child's reading level.
As we transition into another school year, parents throughout Clovis Unified and other Valley schools have been notified that a portion of their child's English grade will be determined by completing novels, and answering narrow comprehension questions online about the story.
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Doug Griffin
Age: 51
Occupation: Estate attorney.
Hobbies: Teaching Sunday School to grade school kids and coaching soccer.
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Erik Peterson
Age: 40
Occupation: Director of information technology for American Ambulance; attorney.
Hobbies: Reading, travel, fantasy football.
Age: 42
Occupation: Teacher at Roosevelt High School in Fresno.
Hobbies: Coaching my kids' athletic teams, reading historical autobiographies.
Bee reader since: 1990
How many letters: 30 since 1997.
Favorite topics: Education and literacy.
Why do you write? The No Child Left Behind law forced schools into a very narrow view of reading instruction. This $6 billion mandate has proved ineffective even by the federal government's own assessment. It has created a multimillion-dollar testing industry that has compromised the type of classroom instruction most parents value, critical thinking and inquiry.
Reaction to letters: Most of my colleagues, friends and family affirm my efforts.
Excerpt from recent letter: "We have high-stakes standardized testing to thank for the hours of homework given to our children. ... Homework serves as a way to drill and prep kids for the spring tests. Here's an idea: A two-year moratorium on standardized testing in California. Not only would this save our bankrupt state millions of dollars, it might restore a bit of sanity and family time to the homes of our school-age children."
Topic that doesn't get enough attention: Our children spend more waking hours in school than at home, yet parents have little say about what children learn or how.
Education: Bachelor's in biblical and religious studies (1989), social science (1994), and a master's in reading/language arts (2001), all at Fresno Pacific University.
Family: My wife of 18 years, Renee; three kids: Tatiana, 11; Joshua, 8; and Isabella, 4.
Political philosophy: I was raised with strong conservative principles. However, my wife Renee, my experience at Fresno Pacific and my students have taught me to value the stories and perspective of others.
-- Compiled by Pam Rowse
@Nyx.CommentBody@