Nothing makes literacy as valuable as adding experiences

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Have your child memorize five important phone numbers using a mnemonic device. Our brains are wonderful computers; the more we use them, the less they wear out and the more valuable they become.

Throughout the next few columns we’ll travel down memory lane reviewing some mnemonic devices you were taught and maybe some you weren’t, but would be helpful to you. One concern of aging is all the things we forget.

Use action (the more humorous the better) to form a mental picture. Example: (Parts of Speech) Verbs jump; prepositions relate; adjectives bounce; nouns name; pronouns hide; adverbs intensify; interjections exclaim.

Acrostics help us remember by creating a sentence using the first letters of a word or phrase relating to it. Good Boys Do Fine Always (The Bass Clef Lines). Creating a chain of events such as to remember the order of the U.S. wars start with “The very tired soldier marched through the Revolutionary War, the Civil War …”

Healthy reading enables a child to observe solutions to problems of which he/she may have never considered. Carlson states, "Individuals growing up today are faced with a lifelong task of running to catch up ... They need to become 'learning' persons, not 'learned' persons."

Nonfiction is a forward thrust in this direction.  Encourage your child to indulge in a good biography, an article in a newspaper or magazine.  Often these reading experiences lead to further research.

Through November I discussed aspects of Native American Literature. America is so fortunate to have so many cultures contributing its best. Hispanics and Latinos have added to our life in America in many ways. 

Reading biographies help us learn about contributions and help us see heroes in everyday ways that lead to inventions, etc. that make a difference to our world.

When we say "Hispanic or Latino," whom are we talking about? For sure, their heritage is not from one nation, nor one culture. Instead, Hispanics and Latinos are greatly diverse people.

Their cultural and linguistic origins are Spanish and Latin American, regardless of race and color. They can be of European, Indian or African descent, or any combination of these three. They can have cultural ties to Mexico, the Caribbean countries, Central America, South America or Spain itself.

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Should state and local government spend tax money in an effort to draw a Sprint Cup race to the Iowa Speedway?

No, it is a private business and should operate on its own revenues
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