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The Weather Network is predicting a cold and potentially stormy winter for much of the country.The network has issued its winter forecast and suggests it will be a more traditional Canadian winter.Chief meteorologist Chris Scott says this winter weather won ;t have much in common with last year comparatively balmy temperatures. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW
stanley thermos mug Scott says the places that will be coldest compared to their average winter temperatures are in the centre of the country: Saskatchewan, Manitoba, most of Ontario and western Quebec.But he says the cold won ;t be constant 鈥?some days may be warmer than average, and others colder. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The only places
stanley water bottle that are expected to be consistently warmer than normal are in the North: the Northwest Territories, Nunavut, Yukon and parts of northern Quebec and Labrador.Scott adds that doesn ;t mean those areas will be warm, saying this is where we expect it to be brutally cold, and we ;re going to be a notch or two above brutal. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW
stanley thermoskannen Meanwhile, precipitation will be above average, in all its forms: rain, snow, sleet, all are possible, Scott says. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Every sign is pointing to a more traditional Canadian winter this Ejqi Ottawa 67 s blank Gatineau Olympiques 4-0
The latest coronavirus news from Canada and around the world Thursday. This file will be updated throughout the day. Web links to longer stories if available.12:48 a.m.: Students in Grade 3 and under experienced the greatest learning loss during COVID-19 disruptions 鈥?on average, between six and eight months of reading skills, new research from the University of Alberta shows.A Winnipeg reading clinician suggests those numbers are even more stark in Manitoba, given that the provinces students lag behind their provincial neighbours in standardized literacy test scores
stanley cup . ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW In early grades, teacher
stanley us s focus on fundamental literacy skills to pave a path for independent readers.Its for that reason education professor George Georgiou said he believes his findings indicate students in Grade 4 and higher have retained ski
stanley quencher lls and learned more than their younger peers throughout the pandemic. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The school closures have impacted mostly the younger kids and particularly, the struggling readers, said Georgiou, the author of two new studies about reading learning loss, during a recent phone call from Edmonton.Georgiou measured reading scores 鈥?based on tests of accuracy, fluency and comprehension 鈥?of more than 4,000 pupils in every grade, between 1 and 9, in Edmonton schools this fall. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW