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         Homework Issues Teach:     more detail

1. Lesson Tutor: Homework Hints And Tips: The Dog Ate My Homework
Provide clear guidelines and expectations. teach organizational skills (use of an agenda, binder sections, Provide a means for communicating homework issues/information with parents
http://www.lessontutor.com/kw8.html
YOUR AD HERE You are HERE >> Learning Disabilities : ADD/ADHD : Target Audience : Parents and Educators with ADD/ADHD children Homework Help: The Dog Ate My Homework!
by Katherine West
October 15, 2000
Does your son or daughter have problems turning in homework on time? Is every night a chore? Do you pull your hair out when trying to help your child do school assignments? Do you get notes from little Johnny or Sally's teacher complaining about sloppy handwriting, daydreaming, or fidgeting in his or her seat? Here are some creative tips, innovative strategies, and commons sense approaches to one of today's biggest problems- homework. With teachers giving more homework than ever, we really must be armed for the task! Homework Help: How can I teach my student good study skills? 1. As young as nine or ten, your child should begin keeping an assignment book. In this book, the child needs to write each and every assignment given by his or her teachers. By instilling this habit into your child's daily routine, he or she will learn to be much more responsible. Less homework assignments will be lost or forgotten, and a good habit has been formed when you employ this technique. Be sure to make very specific rules about missing assignments. Also be firm and clear on the punishment that a child will face as a consequence of his or her missing an assignment. 2. Your child and you need to decide on a place that is conducive to study. This should be a quiet place that is well-lit and free from distractions. Once you have decided on a place to study, this should be the only place that your child does his or her homework and studies. There should also be a very specific time for homework to be done. Usually, as soon as the child gets home from school is the time for the homework to be done. This also goes for the kids who are involved in after school activities. Of course, it is a good idea to allow your child the opportunity to have a healthy snack before the work begins.

2. Education World ® : School Issues: Homework Takes A Hit!
teach the necessary learning strategies for successful independent learning (e.g. school to discover and resolve homework issues, and to develop a realistic and clear homework policy.
http://www.educationworld.com/a_issues/issues134.shtml
Related Reviews
Homework Central

BJ Pinchbeck's Homework Help

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School Issues Center
Archives: ... Teacher's Lounge School Issues Article S C H O O L I S S U E S A R T I C L E
Homework Takes a Hit!
Homework, an entrenched tradition in education, is taking a hit from the authors of a controversial new book that proposes ending the practice. In an Education World e-interview, John Buell, co-author of The End of Homework: How Homework Disrupts Families, Overburdens Children, and Limits Learning, states that there is no solid evidence to support the current intensification of homework as a way of improving academic achievement. Included: Buell makes a case for ending homework as we know it! During the early part of the 20th century, society banned homework. Too much homework was considered unhealthful; it deprived kids of outdoor play and sunshine. Then, during the early 1960s, the emphasis on homework intensified as the United States raced to put a man on the moon ahead of the Russians. The trend continued and today, policy makers emphasize homework as a way of helping students achieve academic success. That trend should end, according to John Buell and Etta Kralovec, co-authors of

3. Homework Center - Social Issues
teachAt-Home is your homeschooling portal to the Internet. News, information, resources, tips, guides and how-to's for the homeschooling family. Please visit our sponsors, their continued support makes teach-At-Home possible homework Helpers (129). Information, Maps, References, Research, Resources Legal issues (13)
http://www.multnomah.lib.or.us/lib/homework/sochc.html
School Corps Library Catalog Library Databases Ask Us! Online ... Tareas Escolares
Social Issues:
This web page has been created to meet the needs of Multnomah County middle and high school students researching current social issues from multiple perspectives.
Abortion

Affirmative Action

AIDS

Animal Rights
...
TOPICsearch

http://orpheus.multcolib.org/rpa/webauth.exe?rs=topic
Provides 40,000 documents supporting 39 main topic areas including the national debate topic. Full text. Must have a Multnomah County Library card to use this service from outside of the Library. Click on "EBSCOhost Web." Remove the check mark next to MasterfilePrimer. Then scroll down to the last database on the page and place a check mark in the box next to TOPICsearch. Press the Continue button to enter the database and begin your search. CQ Researcher
http://library.cqpress.com/cqresearcher/
Provides in-depth research on current events and controversial topics. Reports are known for their balanced approach, providing both sides of an issues. You'll also find chronologies, next steps and bibliographies for further research. Reports date back to 1991.
Available only from search stations at any Multnomah County Library
Abortion
Abortion Megasites Pro-Choice Pro-Life Supreme Court Decisions
Abortion Megasites
Alan Guttmacher Institute: Abortion http://www.agi-usa.org/sections/abortion.html

4. Teach-At-Home... Your Homeschool Resource Center.
Providing links to news, articles, study guides, and support groups.Category Reference Education K through 12 Home Schooling...... homework Helpers (129) Information, Maps, References, Research, Resources Parenting(35) Dads, issues, Moms, New Parents The teachAt-Home index contains 2,104
http://www.teach-at-home.com/
Home Legal About Us Link To Us ... Contact Please visit our sponsors, their continued support makes Teach-At-Home possible
Top-rated by homeschoolers How to Be a Successful Online Student Kingdom of Children: Culture and Controversy in... Christian Charm Course Home Education Curriculum: Grade 5 ... Charlotte Mason's Original Homeschooling Series
Search for in Resource Center Homeschooling Articles News Archive Quote Of The Day Tuesday, April 08, 2003 Teach-at-Home is offering a FREE one-page web site to homeschool groups!
Details:

New Feature Article: "Got the Goods?" by Jody Smith
Site Sponsors
Resource Center
Activities
Crafts, Experiments, Games, Hobbies, Kits, Projects... Beginners
Advice, Basics, FAQ, Getting Organized...
Classes, Day Camps, Summer Camps, Tours...
Careers, Employment, Job Placement, Resumes... College/University Colleges, Financial Aid, Placement, Scholarships, Testing... Health LDO, Dyslexia, Fitness, Wellness, Diet, Nutrition Homework Helpers Information, Maps, References, Research, Resources... Legal Issues Attorneys, Civil Liberties, State Requirements, Lawyers... Lessons Courses, Curricula, Programs, Units...

5. ProTeacher! Classroom Management Ideas For Elementary School Teachers In Grades
Can teach I'm Done, Now What? A List of Things One Can Do After homework issues Policies Things to consider as you plan for homework and your policies
http://www.proteacher.com/030000.shtml

[Click Here]
to search tens of thousands of ideas
on ProTeacher's new Teaching Ideas Archive
Classroom Management
Can Teach: A List of Rewards - Has someone been good? Here is a long list of 49 different rewards you can grant those who have earned a treat source
Vent
- Vent is a place for new teachers to share experiences, and yes, VENT! as they go through the challenges of their first year. Who knows better your joys and frustrations than fellow first year teachers? source
Forms and Letters
- This is a large collection of forms, information, packets and letters needed by teachers. They are available to download for your convenience. Save yourself some time with these source
Laura Candler's File Cabinet Odds and Ends
- Forms, contracts, parent permission letters and all sorts of useful goodies for the busy classroom teacher source Strategies for Classroom Management - From the Florida Dept. of Education come some good strategies for managing your classroom. Organization, Effective Communication Skills, Monitoring and Delivery of Instruction are all discussed source The Responsive Classroom Archives - Several articles that discuss issues of classroom management. These are based on the Responsive Classroom philosophies of modeling, cooperation and positive interaction with children

6. The Value Of Homework
to make it more palatable. homework can teach important values such as responsibility, Educational psychologists who have studied homework issues offer these suggestions.
http://www.kumondallas.com/articles/kumondownloads/The%20Value%20of%20Homework.p

7. Teaching Social Issues Of Computing
for anyone teaching (or soon to teach) a course developing and teaching courses insocial issues of computerization projects, and inclass and homework exercises
http://www.engr.csulb.edu/~jewett/teach/teach.html
Challenges, Ideas, and Resources by
Tom Jewett and Rob Kling
Info Mail Help ... Up
Purpose
This collection of WWW pages , also available in book form from Academic Press (ISBN 0-12-415041-1), is designed for two purposes:
  • as the Instructor's Resource Guide to accompany Computerization and Controversy: Value Conflicts and Social Choices (2nd Ed.), written and edited by Rob Kling, published by Academic Press (to appear, Feb 96)
  • as a general source of information for anyone teaching (or soon to teach) a course in social issues of computerization whether or not they adopt this book for their class. Social Issues of Computing page.
    Organization
    The material is organized here into four parts:
  • The Introduction explains the background and motivation of this project.
  • Section I - Challenges and Ideas discusses in detail many of the challenges that we have faced in developing and teaching courses in social issues of computerization, and the ways in which we (and others) have responded to these.
  • Section II - Resources contains listings of related sources of information including other WWW pages, example syllabi, term projects, and in-class and homework exercises. We will add materials to this section as we learn of them.
  • References We welcome comments, suggestions, and additions please use the mail form provided (button at the top of this and other pages).
  • 8. MEL Education: Hot Topics
    teach Me, teach My Brain A Call for school districts implementing the recommendationsfor increased homework? What issues should be considered when developing
    http://mel.lib.mi.us/education/edu-hot.html

    Michigan.gov Home
    HAL Home MeL Internet MeL Magazines and eBooks Education About the Education Collection Michigan Education What's New? Hot Topics in Education ... Back to the Education Index
    Hot Topics in Education
    No Child Left Behind Page Terrorism Response for Educators General Reform Block Scheduling ... Social Promotion
    General-Education Reform

    9. Homework Center - Social Issues
    One way in which some educators present a different way to teach about evolution MultnomahCounty Library homework Center Social issues Legalization of
    http://www.multcolib.org/homework/sochc.html
    School Corps Library Catalog Library Databases Ask Us! Online ... Tareas Escolares
    Social Issues:
    This web page has been created to meet the needs of Multnomah County middle and high school students researching current social issues from multiple perspectives.
    Abortion

    Affirmative Action

    AIDS

    Animal Rights
    ...
    TOPICsearch

    http://orpheus.multcolib.org/rpa/webauth.exe?rs=topic
    Provides 40,000 documents supporting 39 main topic areas including the national debate topic. Full text. Must have a Multnomah County Library card to use this service from outside of the Library. Click on "EBSCOhost Web." Remove the check mark next to MasterfilePrimer. Then scroll down to the last database on the page and place a check mark in the box next to TOPICsearch. Press the Continue button to enter the database and begin your search. CQ Researcher
    http://library.cqpress.com/cqresearcher/
    Provides in-depth research on current events and controversial topics. Reports are known for their balanced approach, providing both sides of an issues. You'll also find chronologies, next steps and bibliographies for further research. Reports date back to 1991.
    Available only from search stations at any Multnomah County Library
    Abortion
    Abortion Megasites Pro-Choice Pro-Life Supreme Court Decisions
    Abortion Megasites
    Alan Guttmacher Institute: Abortion http://www.agi-usa.org/sections/abortion.html

    10. Homework Center - Other Reference Resources
    teachnology.com http//www.teach-nology.com/teachers/subject_matter Today Destinationshttp//www.refdesk.com/homework.html Weekly For Social issues Resources
    http://www.multcolib.org/homework/ref.html
    School Corps Library Catalog Library Databases Ask Us! Online ... Tareas Escolares
    Other Homework Reference Resources:
    700+ Great Sites
    http://www.ala.org/parentspage/greatsites/amazing.html
    From the American Library Association.
    About.com
    http://www.about.com/
    What used to be called "The Mining Company" now has a new name. A Company-certified subject specialist presents Web sites on a variety of topics. Searchable.
    About.com: Homework Help
    http://home.about.com/homework/
    What used to be called "The Mining Company" now has a new name. A Company-certified subject specialist presents Web sites on a variety of topics specific to homework needs. Searchable.
    AOL@School
    http://www.school.aol.com/
    AOL's homework help site breaks sites down by primary, elementary, middle and high school levels.
    Ask An Expert
    http://www.askanexpert.com/
    Search this site to see if a question you have been wondering about has been answered. If it hasn't email in your question and receive a response from a real, live person (one week response time is typical)!
    B.B.C. A to Z Index

    11. Education World® : School Issues : Time To Teach
    Time to teach. that have come to dominate everything that happens in English primaryschools, from the deployment of staff to the setting of spelling homework.
    http://www.education-world.com/a_issues/issues308.shtml

    School Issues Center
    Archives: VIEW ALL ARTICLES Assessment ... Voice of Experience School Issues Article V O I C E O F E X P E R I E N C E
    Time to Teach
    This week's Voice of Experience essay was originally published on spiked , a London-based Web site "for those who want to see some change in the real world.…" Educator Sue Palmer reflects on the standards (or targets) movement in the United Kingdom. "How had we let statistics become more important than children?" she wonders. Palmer has created a Web site to support her campaign to improve the quality of British primary education by returning decisions about curriculum to the professionals the teachers who know best!
    You know how sometimes you go along with something because, even though it obviously isn't perfect, it seems to be headed in the right general direction? And as time goes on, it gets less and less perfect, but you carry on being a fellow-traveller because ... well, what else is there to do? And then, things get sillier and sillier until you find yourself waking up in the middle of the night thinking, 'How, in the name of sanity, did I get mixed up in all this? I've got to bail out. Now!' Well, with me it's targets [standards]. The UK government's targets for achievement in literacy and numeracy at age 11. Targets set by the Department for Education and Skills (DfES), and imposed with utter ruthlessness across the land. Targets that have come to dominate everything that happens in English primary schools, from the deployment of staff to the setting of spelling homework.

    12. Education World ® : School Issues: The School Day: It's Not A Race; Let's Chang
    Who needs a homework call from a classmate tonight? Instead of rushing to the WoodThe writers I mentioned above teach us in their books that teaching is
    http://www.educationworld.com/a_issues/issues058.shtml

    School Issues Center
    Archives: VIEW ALL ARTICLES Assessment ... Grouping/Scheduling School Issues Article S C H O O L I S S U E S A R T I C L E
    The School Day: It's Not a Race; Let's Change the Pace!
    Does the relentless pace of the school day frustrate you? Do you need to cram more and more into six hours? In his latest book, Time to Teach, Time to Learn , Chip Wood takes a serious look at the frenetic pace of teaching and learning. He offers dozens of suggestions for refocusing on what's really important during the school day. In this exclusive Education World e-interview, Wood talks about his new book and about his ideas for changing the way we spend time in school.
    It's time time to take another look at the flow of the school day. In Time to Teach, Time to Learn: Changing the Pace of School, just published by the Northeast Foundation for Children Yardsticks: Children in the Classroom Ages 4-14. This week, he took time to share with Education World some of his thoughts and ideas about time in the classroom. Education World: In 1985, you wrote in

    13. Past Issues Of Newsletter
    Math Solutions Newsletters Past issues. Find supportive answers for your tough howto-teach-math questions. Math homework That Counts, Grades 4–6
    http://www.mathsolutions.com/mb/frames/n_newsletter_frame.html
    Math Solutions Online Newsletter Past Issues Fall 2002, Issue 7 Summer 2002, Issue 6 Spring 2002, Issue 5 Fall 2001, Issue 3 ... Spring 2001, Issue 1 Math Solutions Newsletters Past Issues Issue 28, Fall/Winter 2000-01 So You Have To Teach Math? Find supportive answers for your tough "how-to-teach-math" questions.
      Read how a single math problem can be a stimulating homework assignment.
    Issue 27, Spring/Summer 2000 Dates
      Birthdays, pennies, and graphs help these first and second graders make sense of money.
    Making Change for 20 Cents
      Third graders offer Marilyn Burns a lesson in making change.
    The Search for $1.00 Words
      Help build children's number sense with this creative, engaging activity.
    Ratio, Proportion, and a $10 Bill
      This lesson for middle school students gives them concrete experience with ratio, proportion, measurement, and more.
    More About Dates
      Fourth and fifth graders become more adept at mental calculation in this lesson.

    14. The Body: GMHC Treatment Issues -- Project TEACH Instructors' Handbook
    to participate in community mobilization on issues they care we have seen that TEACHmembers can homework readings and interactive exercises give additional
    http://www.thebody.com/gmhc/issues/nov02/teach.html
    GMHC Treatment Issues
    Volume 16, Number 11, November 2002
    A Publication of the Gay Men's Health Crisis
    Project TEACH Instructors' Handbook
    By Julie Davids and Val Sowell
    History of Project TEACH
    Project TEACH stands for Treatment Education Activists Combatting HIV. TEACH was initiated in Philadelphia in 1995 by Julie Davids and Jeff Maskovsky, two members of ACT UP Philadelphia, working in collaboration with two local organizations, Philadelphia FIGHT and We the People Living with HIV/AIDS, Inc. Philadelphia FIGHT brought together people living with HIV and other AIDS activists, clinicians, and researchers to sustain a community research initiative and bring cutting-edge treatment and research information to the impacted communities of Philadelphia. Today it is the largest provider of HIV/AIDS medical care in the region. We the People, a groundbreaking PWA coalition primarily led by people of color, was a central force for effective community mobilization in struggles for housing, benefits and inclusion of people with HIV in decision-making processes. As treatment activists and organizations rooted in the day-to-day experiences of people with HIV in Philadelphia, the initiators of Project TEACH designed the program to move towards the stated goals of people most impacted by HIV in the mid-1990s current and former drug users, people of color, and women. They felt that crucial medical and HIV-specific information was not reaching their communities, and that they did not have meaningful participation in debates and decisions that impacted their communities. They felt that people were dying because they did not have information that would have saved or prolonged their lives.

    15. Issues In Disabilities And Special Education - Key Articles - Homework
    In recent years, researchers have tackled issues related to for students to usein bringing homework home and teach the routine to the children and inform
    http://www.peakparent.org/pages/Issues_Key_Homework.html
    Reprinted from Research Connections in Special Education, Number 8, Spring 2001) Homework has traditionally been considered by educators and parents alike to be an important ingredient in academic success. For students with disabilities, homework is also importantand in many cases, especially difficult. In recent years, researchers have tackled issues related to homework and how to ensure that students with disabilities benefit from it. This issue describes their work. "Access to all aspects of the general education curriculum is emphasized by the 1997 amendments to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Homework is one of these aspects." Marjorie Montague - Researcher University of Miami Homework Practices that Support Students with Disabilities Homework is one aspect of the general education curriculum that has been widely recognized as important to academic success. Teachers have long used homework to provide additional learning time, strengthen study and organizational skills, and in some respects, keep parents informed of their children's progress. Generally, when students with disabilities participate in the general education curriculum, they are expected to complete homework along with their peers. But, just as students with disabilities may need instructional accommodations in the classroom, they may also need homework accommodations.
    "There is little question that homework has taken on a position of significance in American education," Edward Polloway, researcher at Lynchburg College, says. "At the same time, with the movement towards inclusion of students with disabilities in general education classrooms, the challenges for these students to be successful are increased by the greater reliance on homework as an adjunct to instruction. Without attention to the need for adaptations in homework assignments, research and practice would suggest that we have little reason to be optimistic about the potential success of these students."

    16. End Homework Now // By Etta Kralovec And John Buell
    hours a day, but they teach only four than defending the practice of homework, educatorsshould direct national discussion to more important issues.
    http://www.ascd.org/readingroom/edlead/0104/kralovec.html
    Volume Number April 2001 Beyond Class Time End Homework Now by Etta Kralovec and John Buell Educators should stop squeezing time out of family life for the questionable benefits of homework. Parents say that teachers require it. Teachers say that parents demand more of it. Politicians call for grading parents on their ability to help with it. Citizens run for school board seats on no-homework platforms. The National Parent Teacher Association and the National Education Association set guidelines. Some dismiss the current anti-homework outcry as just the latest swing of the opinion pendulum. School boards and politicians dictate homework policies for political rather than pedagogical reasons. Teachers say that they are increasingly uncomfortable about handing over to parents the learning for which teachers are accountable. Welcome to the homework wars. When the school board in Piscataway, New Jersey, voted earlier this fall to limit homework in the elementary grades to half an hour each night and high school homework to two hours a night, the New York Times Homework squeezes family life. All parents have educational agendas for their children. They want to pass on their cultural heritage, religious beliefs, and important life skills. They want to teach their children how to be good citizens and how to share in the responsibilities of running a home. More homework makes parents put their own agendas on hold even as they often struggle to help their children cope with homework assignments. Additionally, families need time to constitute themselves as families. According to a 1998 survey by Public Agenda, nearly 50 percent of parents reported having a serious argument with their children over homework, and 34 percent reported homework as a source of stress and struggle. Parents often have conflicting feelings about homework, viewing it as a way for their children to succeed but also as imposing serious limits on family time.

    17. PBS Parents . Issues & Advice . Growing With Media | PBS
    homework with Habits of Mind Ask your child to describe what the homework assignmentis teach your child to give credit when he uses something that isn't his
    http://www.pbs.org/parents/issuesadvice/growingwithmedia/gradeschool/dilemmas/di
    How can I help my son make sense of information he finds on the Internet? When he's doing his homework he seems to randomly copy text without paying attention to where the information comes from.
    - Tina, Medford, OR
    Helping your child form what some teachers call "habits of mind" - the practice of asking critical questions - will help him evaluate information that he gets from Web sites and other sources.
    When it comes to using the Internet for homework assignments, one of the first things you want to do is encourage your son to view Web sites as homework aids, not as homework answers. As appealing as it is to do, he shouldn't simply copy text and download pictures. Although homework assignments vary, as a general rule you should help him understand that it's okay to read and use information from various resources, but direct copying is plagiarism.
    Admittedly, cutting and pasting can make for some impressive-looking homework. There is an enormous amount of data - pictures, news clippings, journal entries, pre-digested information - waiting to be mined. In the so-called "Information Age," students no longer need to reconstruct the galaxy out of Styrofoam. Instead, they can download spectacular images that a satellite or space station has sent to NASA.
    Copying from the Internet is easy to do. It's fun to do. But it's not all that he can do. As time-consuming as it may seem, help your son get into the habit of asking questions about information - whether it's from the Internet, out of a book, on TV or from a teacher.

    18. PBS Parents . Issues & Advice . School & Education | PBS
    Improving homework Skills Tips ons improving your child’s homework skills (from theEdge The Shift From Knowledge to Creativity teach creativity alongside
    http://www.pbs.org/parents/issuesadvice/school_education.html

    PBS TeacherSource

    Find articles on education and lessons for homeschoolers
    Testing Our Schools

    What are school tests measuring and are results fair?
    In the News
    Millions of American Children Suffer From Serious Learning Problems

    Learn more about reading, writing, mathematics, and attention disorders and differences from Misunderstood Minds
    Testing children for learning disabilties (from Inclusive Communities)
    The Battle of School Choice

    School vouchers and education reform (from Frontline) Cognitive development milestones: 0-5 (from the Whole Child) Cognitive Skills Activities to develop cognitive skills (from Clifford) Conflict Resolution in Schools How schools handle classroom conflicts (from PBS TeacherSource) Creativity and Play Fostering creativity and play in kids (from the Whole Child) Developing Critical Thinking Skills Activities to develop critical thinking (from Clifford) Diminishing Astonishment Sharing new technology with kids (from PBS TeacherSource) Family Math Night: What, Why, and How? Participate in Family Math Night (from PBS TeacherSource) Family Rights Learn your child's educational rights (from Inclusive Communitites) The Family-School Connection Building family-school communication (from the Whole Child) Feeling Good About School Help kids feel confident at school (from Arthur) Good Schools Require the Arts Quality art programs for all (from PBS TeacherSource) Developing thinking and reasoning skills (from the Whole Child) Helping kids make sense of online information (from Growing With Media) Improving Homework Skills Tips ons improving your child’s homework skills

    19. Homework Backgrounder
    teach the necessary learning strategies for successful independent learning (egtime Work with the school to discover and resolve homework issues, and to
    http://www.schoolcouncils.net/report01.htm
    Learning at Home
    Through Homework
    An Opportunity for Partnership Between Home and School In the Interests of Student Learning A Background Document to Stimulate Discussion and the Development of an Updated Approach to Homework for Individual Elementary Schools October 1999 Updated: November 2000 Solving Homework Problems
    Homework is a source of frustration in many schools, and in many households. Yet research suggests that ‘learning at home’ is one of the most effective methods for parents to assist their children in doing better at school. (Dr. Joyce Epstein, 1995) If the subject of homework has not been reviewed within a particular school for some time, perhaps opportunity exists for a joint committee of teachers and parents to review the current situation within a school and provide recommendations to the administration, staff, parents and school community. A review of the current situation involves honestly asking and answering several key questions as follows: 1. What are the current perceptions of teachers, parents and students regarding homework? 2. Is the school’s homework policy clear, and is it being followed by all teachers, students and parents?

    20. QWERTY Education Services
    a student and parents are having difficulty resolving homework issues or determining Macintoshcomputers are used to teach keyboard and word processing skills.
    http://www.qwc.com/servca.html
    At QWERTY Education Services, children and adults can receive highly individualized instruction, educational evaluation, and other forms of education consultation. There is no pre-set curriculum or program. Students' needs are discussed and evaluated, then objectives and strategies are designed to address those concerns. We are committed to building supportive, individual relationships that provide guidance and support to better the lives of a wide range of students. A variety of scheduling options is available. Academic Tutoring Educational Evaluation Follow-up Consultation ... Keyboard and Word Processing for Children and Adults Long Distance Tutoring Summer Programs Writing Skills for Adults Homework Environment Planning ... [Fees]
    ACADEMIC TUTORING Individual tutoring is an excellent way to develop confidence, organization, motivation, and study skills. It is also an effective means to better understand a student's strengths and weaknesses and to reduce the frustration often felt by parents and students when the student is not performing up to expectations. Academic tutoring can directly support the school curriculum or provide a separate program of enrichment or remedial work. A combination of these approaches is often appropriate. Wisely applied technology is often central to how we interact with students and how we teach students to communicate. Daily written progress reports are provided. [Click here for more thoughts on the power of individual tutoring EDUCATIONAL EVALUATION Formal or informal cognitive and educational assessment by a licensed educational psychologist or certified learning specialist is available for the assessment of learning strengths and difficulties. Evaluation can be limited in scope to provide a basic measure of achievement and/or aptitude, or it can take the form of on-going, in-depth diagnostic testing combined with instruction. It may be used to document eligibility for special education services and classroom accommodations or combined with other assessment information. Such evaluations are often requested in preparation for college or private secondary school applications or to document a student's eligibility for alternative testing procedures.

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