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New literacy pack aims to boost reading skills for students across California
New literacy pack aims to boost reading skills for students across California

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

New literacy pack aims to boost reading skills for students across California

( — State Superintendent Tony Thurmond and Governor Gavin Newsom announced on Tuesday the release of the California Literacy-Biliteracy Professional Learning Pack. California Department of Education stated that this would be a comprehensive suite of resources designed to improve literacy instruction and support educators across the state in improving student outcomes, especially for younger readers. Defense Intelligence Agency IT Specialist arrested for allegedly sharing classified information 'In California, we know that learning to read is the start of the pathway to success. The Literacy Roadmap highlights our multifaceted approach to improving literacy for California's students, including current and proposed initiatives,' Governor Newsom said. 'When added to our other investments in literacy coaches and reading specialists at high-needs schools and professional development for teachers, we are doubling down on our commitment to ensure no student falls behind in their reading.' The new Professional Learning Pack includes two crucial literacy guidance documents, CDE stated. The first is set to be the California Literacy Roadmap's Literacy Content Blocks for English-Medium Classrooms, which is focused on transitional Kindergarten through Grade Five. The roadmap provides instructional recommendations that educators can use to support students as they develop across all areas of literacy and bitliteracy, according to Newsom. The blocks will reflect an intentional approach to literacy that will promote sequenced initial instruction, appropriate practice and reinforcement, intervention as necessary, and meaningful application in English language arts. 'Literacy is foundational to lifelong learning and academic success,' said Superintendent Thurmond. 'With this release, California takes a significant step forward in providing educators with the tools they need to foster strong literacy and biliteracy development from the earliest years of learning as we move the needle on student achievement, particularly for our youngest readers.' The second document is Preschool through Third Grade Learning Progressions for Language and Literacy Development, which will outline key developmental milestones and offer examples of play-based, inquiry-based instruction to support early literacy in both English and students' home languages, according to CDE. 'In California, we're focused on an approach to literacy that supports evidence-based instruction and high-quality professional learning,' said State Board of Education President Linda Darling-Hammond. 'The Literacy Roadmap and the Literacy Learning Progressions provide teachers with key resources and tools they can use to support every child in learning to read with comprehension, write with expression, and explore the world of books with excitement.' Over $120M in banned cannabis seized by CA task force CDE said that these professional learning tools have been endorsed by a board coalition of experts in literacy and biliteracy instruction, which includes The Reading League, the California Association for Bilingual Education, and Californians Together. Educators are encouraged to incorporate the materials into their summer and school-year professional development plans, said CDE. The full Professional Learning Pack can be found here. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Why Coeur Mining, Inc. (CDE) Soared On Wednesday
Why Coeur Mining, Inc. (CDE) Soared On Wednesday

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Why Coeur Mining, Inc. (CDE) Soared On Wednesday

We recently published a list of . In this article, we are going to take a look at where Coeur Mining, Inc. (NYSE:CDE) stands against other best-performing stocks. Coeur Mining saw its share prices rise by 4.33 percent on Wednesday to finish at $8.43 apiece following the launch of a $75-million share buyback, effective through May 31, 2026. In a statement, Coeur Mining, Inc. (NYSE:CDE) President and Chief Executive Officer Mitchell Krebs said that the initiative was aimed at boosting shareholder value. Aerial view of a gold mine, reflecting the company's precious metals mining operations. Coeur Mining, Inc. (NYSE:CDE) said repurchases under the program may be carried out from time to time through opportunistic open-market purchases or by other means in amounts and at prices that the company deems appropriate. In recent news, Coeur Mining, Inc. (NYSE:CDE) said it swung to a net income of $33.4 million from a $29.1 million net loss in the same period last year. Revenues jumped by 69 percent to $360.1 million from $213.1 million year-on-year. For the full year 2025, Coeur Mining, Inc. (NYSE:CDE) expects to produce 95,000 to 105,000 ounces of gold and 5.4 million to 6.5 million ounces of silver. It also targets to spend between $26 million and $32 million, consisting primarily of sustaining capital and underground development. Overall, CDE ranks 7th on our list of best-performing stocks. While we acknowledge the potential of CDE, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than CDE and that has 10,000x upside potential, check out our report about this cheapest AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.

Mission Ready Software Launches Requs Software FMEA for a New Era of Safe and Reliable Software Intensive Systems
Mission Ready Software Launches Requs Software FMEA for a New Era of Safe and Reliable Software Intensive Systems

Associated Press

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Associated Press

Mission Ready Software Launches Requs Software FMEA for a New Era of Safe and Reliable Software Intensive Systems

05/29/2025, Okatie, South Carolina // PRODIGY: Feature Story // Mission Ready Software Mission Ready Software announced the launch of Requs Software FMEA. This platform is designed to improve how engineering teams anticipate, evaluate, and mitigate software failure risks before a single line of code is written. For decades, the company has been committed to equipping engineers with the tools they need to develop reliable and safe software. This product launch reflects Mission Ready Software's dedication to making critical software work better with minimal expense and schedule delay. 'Requs Software FMEA [Failure Modes and Effects Analysis] is the fruit of over 30 years of engineering pain points, postmortem investigations, and our desire to stop software disasters before they start,' says Ann Marie Neufelder, founder and president of Mission Ready Software. 'The future of safe systems and critical infrastructure depends on our ability to predict software failure before it happens. The question is no longer can we predict it but whether we choose to.' Software is embedded in every layer of critical systems. Still, the effectiveness of conventional testing and quality assurance methods continues to stagnate. Mission Ready Software recognizes that software failures have caused serious disruptions with far-reaching financial and safety consequences. These could include outages that paralyze critical systems across industries and defects that contribute to tragic accidents. For instance, in mission-critical products such as defense, aviation, or vehicles, even a single overlooked flaw can trigger cascading failures with potentially catastrophic outcomes. This is the world Requs Software FMEA was built to safeguard against. The product's foresight is urgent, given the rise of autonomous platforms. Software has elevated the stakes of getting software right. One overlooked defect in a driverless vehicle, a surgical robot, or a transportation system doesn't just carry financial risk. It can endanger lives or destroy national infrastructure. 'We're entering an era where software defects can no longer be seen as bugs. They're potential fault lines in systems the world depends on,' Neufelder states. Most software debugging and analysis tools analyze already-written code. Requs Software FMEA shifts the reliability timeline forward. It's built on the Common Defect Enumeration (CDE), a catalog of hundreds of root causes of known software failures that Mission Ready Software authored. The tool empowers engineers to predict and prevent failure modes before coding begins. The CDE is derived from more than 30 years of software failure event data across industries, from aerospace to consumer electronics. Engineers input system-level information into Requs, and the software rapidly identifies which failure modes are relevant and their likelihood of occurring. 'You don't need the code. You just need to describe what your system is supposed to do,' explains Neufelder. 'The software does the heavy lifting by filtering out the irrelevant and surfacing only what matters.' Besides its predictive power, Requs can reduce the time cost traditionally associated with FMEA. It integrates seamlessly with Requs AI Predict, the company's machine learning engine that estimates the total number of defects a project is likely to contain based on development practices, project characteristics, and domain before the code is ever written. The real impact of Requs Software FMEA lies in its potential to level the playing field for engineering teams across sectors, whether for aerospace, automotive, defense, or a medical device manufacturer. The platform transforms decades of domain-specific software failure knowledge into a simple, usable, and affordable application. Moreover, as the effort and expense required to fix software issues continue to grow over time, and unresolved problems accumulate into mounting technical debt, addressing risks early has become essential. Mission Ready Software aims to ensure cost-effective long-term system viability. Ultimately, systems are growing more complex and interconnected, from nuclear plants to hospital operating rooms and automated tractors roaming farmlands. Accompanying them is an unprecedented safety and reliability risk. Hence, a product like Requs Software FMEA has never been more essential. Media Contact Name: Rachel Neufelder Email: [email protected]

Mission Ready Software Launches Requs Software FMEA for a New Era of Safe and Reliable Software Intensive Systems
Mission Ready Software Launches Requs Software FMEA for a New Era of Safe and Reliable Software Intensive Systems

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Mission Ready Software Launches Requs Software FMEA for a New Era of Safe and Reliable Software Intensive Systems

Mission Ready Software has launched a predictive tool that helps engineers predict software failures before writing a single line of code. Okatie, South Carolina, May 29, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Mission Ready SoftwareMission Ready Software announced the launch of Requs Software FMEA. This platform is designed to improve how engineering teams anticipate, evaluate, and mitigate software failure risks before a single line of code is written. For decades, the company has been committed to equipping engineers with the tools they need to develop reliable and safe software. This product launch reflects Mission Ready Software's dedication to making critical software work better with minimal expense and schedule delay. 'Requs Software FMEA [Failure Modes and Effects Analysis] is the fruit of over 30 years of engineering pain points, postmortem investigations, and our desire to stop software disasters before they start,' says Ann Marie Neufelder, founder and president of Mission Ready Software. 'The future of safe systems and critical infrastructure depends on our ability to predict software failure before it happens. The question is no longer can we predict it but whether we choose to.' Software is embedded in every layer of critical systems. Still, the effectiveness of conventional testing and quality assurance methods continues to stagnate. Mission Ready Software recognizes that software failures have caused serious disruptions with far-reaching financial and safety consequences. These could include outages that paralyze critical systems across industries and defects that contribute to tragic accidents. For instance, in mission-critical products such as defense, aviation, or vehicles, even a single overlooked flaw can trigger cascading failures with potentially catastrophic outcomes. This is the world Requs Software FMEA was built to safeguard against. The product's foresight is urgent, given the rise of autonomous platforms. Software has elevated the stakes of getting software right. One overlooked defect in a driverless vehicle, a surgical robot, or a transportation system doesn't just carry financial risk. It can endanger lives or destroy national infrastructure. 'We're entering an era where software defects can no longer be seen as bugs. They're potential fault lines in systems the world depends on,' Neufelder states. Most software debugging and analysis tools analyze already-written code. Requs Software FMEA shifts the reliability timeline forward. It's built on the Common Defect Enumeration (CDE), a catalog of hundreds of root causes of known software failures that Mission Ready Software authored. The tool empowers engineers to predict and prevent failure modes before coding begins. The CDE is derived from more than 30 years of software failure event data across industries, from aerospace to consumer electronics. Engineers input system-level information into Requs, and the software rapidly identifies which failure modes are relevant and their likelihood of occurring. 'You don't need the code. You just need to describe what your system is supposed to do,' explains Neufelder. 'The software does the heavy lifting by filtering out the irrelevant and surfacing only what matters.' Besides its predictive power, Requs can reduce the time cost traditionally associated with FMEA. It integrates seamlessly with Requs AI Predict, the company's machine learning engine that estimates the total number of defects a project is likely to contain based on development practices, project characteristics, and domain before the code is ever written. The real impact of Requs Software FMEA lies in its potential to level the playing field for engineering teams across sectors, whether for aerospace, automotive, defense, or a medical device manufacturer. The platform transforms decades of domain-specific software failure knowledge into a simple, usable, and affordable application. Moreover, as the effort and expense required to fix software issues continue to grow over time, and unresolved problems accumulate into mounting technical debt, addressing risks early has become essential. Mission Ready Software aims to ensure cost-effective long-term system viability. Ultimately, systems are growing more complex and interconnected, from nuclear plants to hospital operating rooms and automated tractors roaming farmlands. Accompanying them is an unprecedented safety and reliability risk. Hence, a product like Requs Software FMEA has never been more essential. Media Contact Name: Rachel Neufelder Email: sales@ Sign in to access your portfolio

Mission Ready Software Launches Requs Software FMEA for a New Era of Safe and Reliable Software Intensive Systems
Mission Ready Software Launches Requs Software FMEA for a New Era of Safe and Reliable Software Intensive Systems

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Mission Ready Software Launches Requs Software FMEA for a New Era of Safe and Reliable Software Intensive Systems

Mission Ready Software has launched a predictive tool that helps engineers predict software failures before writing a single line of code. Okatie, South Carolina, May 29, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Mission Ready SoftwareMission Ready Software announced the launch of Requs Software FMEA. This platform is designed to improve how engineering teams anticipate, evaluate, and mitigate software failure risks before a single line of code is written. For decades, the company has been committed to equipping engineers with the tools they need to develop reliable and safe software. This product launch reflects Mission Ready Software's dedication to making critical software work better with minimal expense and schedule delay. 'Requs Software FMEA [Failure Modes and Effects Analysis] is the fruit of over 30 years of engineering pain points, postmortem investigations, and our desire to stop software disasters before they start,' says Ann Marie Neufelder, founder and president of Mission Ready Software. 'The future of safe systems and critical infrastructure depends on our ability to predict software failure before it happens. The question is no longer can we predict it but whether we choose to.' Software is embedded in every layer of critical systems. Still, the effectiveness of conventional testing and quality assurance methods continues to stagnate. Mission Ready Software recognizes that software failures have caused serious disruptions with far-reaching financial and safety consequences. These could include outages that paralyze critical systems across industries and defects that contribute to tragic accidents. For instance, in mission-critical products such as defense, aviation, or vehicles, even a single overlooked flaw can trigger cascading failures with potentially catastrophic outcomes. This is the world Requs Software FMEA was built to safeguard against. The product's foresight is urgent, given the rise of autonomous platforms. Software has elevated the stakes of getting software right. One overlooked defect in a driverless vehicle, a surgical robot, or a transportation system doesn't just carry financial risk. It can endanger lives or destroy national infrastructure. 'We're entering an era where software defects can no longer be seen as bugs. They're potential fault lines in systems the world depends on,' Neufelder states. Most software debugging and analysis tools analyze already-written code. Requs Software FMEA shifts the reliability timeline forward. It's built on the Common Defect Enumeration (CDE), a catalog of hundreds of root causes of known software failures that Mission Ready Software authored. The tool empowers engineers to predict and prevent failure modes before coding begins. The CDE is derived from more than 30 years of software failure event data across industries, from aerospace to consumer electronics. Engineers input system-level information into Requs, and the software rapidly identifies which failure modes are relevant and their likelihood of occurring. 'You don't need the code. You just need to describe what your system is supposed to do,' explains Neufelder. 'The software does the heavy lifting by filtering out the irrelevant and surfacing only what matters.' Besides its predictive power, Requs can reduce the time cost traditionally associated with FMEA. It integrates seamlessly with Requs AI Predict, the company's machine learning engine that estimates the total number of defects a project is likely to contain based on development practices, project characteristics, and domain before the code is ever written. The real impact of Requs Software FMEA lies in its potential to level the playing field for engineering teams across sectors, whether for aerospace, automotive, defense, or a medical device manufacturer. The platform transforms decades of domain-specific software failure knowledge into a simple, usable, and affordable application. Moreover, as the effort and expense required to fix software issues continue to grow over time, and unresolved problems accumulate into mounting technical debt, addressing risks early has become essential. Mission Ready Software aims to ensure cost-effective long-term system viability. Ultimately, systems are growing more complex and interconnected, from nuclear plants to hospital operating rooms and automated tractors roaming farmlands. Accompanying them is an unprecedented safety and reliability risk. Hence, a product like Requs Software FMEA has never been more essential. Media Contact Name: Rachel Neufelder Email: sales@ Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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