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RESOURCES

MSF Calendar

Moonshot Families' Monthly Read / Talk / Play / Sing / Create Calendar

April 2024 front RTPSC Calendar - April 2024 RTPSC Calendar-1.jpg
April 2024 back RTPSC Calendar - April 2024 RTPSC Calendar-1.jpg
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Upcoming Events

Upcoming Events

April 24 - Monthly Moonshot Community Action Network (MCAN) Meeting

April 25 - Town of Indian River Shores "Moonshot Proclamation" at 9:00 am

Visit our Facebook page to see where our Moonshot Community group will be in 2024!

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Resource Videos
The Statisticks Lottery
05:07

The Statisticks Lottery

The Campaign for Grade-Level Reading (www.http://gradelevelreading.net) is a collaborative effort by foundations, nonprofit partners, states and communities across the nation to ensure that more children in low-income families succeed in school and graduate prepared for college, a career, and active citizenship. The Campaign focuses on the most important predictor of school success and high school graduation—grade-level reading by the end of third grade. Research shows that proficiency in reading by the end of third grade enables students to shift from learning to read to reading to learn, and to master the more complex subject matter they encounter in the fourth grade curriculum. Most students who fail to reach this critical milestone falter in the later grades and often drop out before earning a high school diploma. Yet two-thirds of U.S. fourth graders are not proficient readers, according to national reading assessment data. This disturbing statistic is made even worse by the fact that more than four out of every five low-income students miss this critical milestone. Although schools must be accountable for helping all children achieve, providing effective teaching for all children in every classroom every day, the Campaign is based on the belief that schools cannot succeed alone. Engaged communities mobilized to remove barriers, expand opportunities, and assist parents in fulfilling their roles and responsibilities to serve as full partners in the success of their children are needed to assure student success.
3. Toxic Stress Derails Healthy Development
01:52

3. Toxic Stress Derails Healthy Development

Learning how to cope with adversity is an important part of healthy development. While moderate, short-lived stress responses in the body can promote growth, toxic stress is the strong, unrelieved activation of the body's stress management system in the absence of protective adult support. Without caring adults to buffer children, the unrelenting stress caused by extreme poverty, neglect, abuse, or severe maternal depression can weaken the architecture of the developing brain, with long-term consequences for learning, behavior, and both physical and mental health. This video is part three of a three-part series titled "Three Core Concepts in Early Development" from the Center and the National Scientific Council on the Developing Child. The series depicts how advances in neuroscience, molecular biology, and genomics now give us a much better understanding of how early experiences are built into our bodies and brains, for better or for worse. Healthy development in the early years provides the building blocks for educational achievement, economic productivity, responsible citizenship, lifelong health, strong communities, and successful parenting of the next generation. Also from the "Three Core Concepts in Early Development" Series 1. Experiences Build Brain Architecture: http://youtu.be/VNNsN9IJkws 2. Serve & Return Interaction Shapes Brain Circuitry: http://youtu.be/m_5u8-QSh6A For more information, please visit: http://developingchild.harvard.edu/resources/multimedia/videos/three_core_concepts/
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Tip Sheets

Literacy Resource Sheets

Children begin learning from the moment they are born. Research has found that providing infants, toddlers, and young children with consistent, language-rich experiences –talking, reading, and singing – greatly benefits their brain development and school readiness. Check out these resource sheets below so that you can be your child's best first teacher.

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