Parents – Improving Education

Homework Is Sabotaging My Family!


For the last few months, my son has been drowning in homework! He’s in second-grade. As you may know, he has dyslexia and ADHD. But, his “disabilities” are not the problem. As a matter of fact, our targeted interventions and his hard work have put him very close to “grade-level.” He hates writing (the process of forming letters, not composition). Otherwise, he’s progressing nicely.

Nonetheless, he’s drowning in homework.

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The Cost of NOT Teaching Study Skills

As school budgets are rapidly shrinking, administrators have to carefully consider how to allocate their budget; they need to get the most “bang for their buck.” Managing a school budget is an art form involving hundreds of decisions and balancing dozens of demands.

“HOW CAN WE MAKE THE GREATEST IMPACT?”

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SOAR Is in the News!

I’m from the Detroit area and our local economy, like many others, has been hit hard lately. People from the Motor City are working hard to re-innovate themselves and the community. It’s an energizing time to be a part of this town (especially now that our baseball team has just clinched the American League Central Division Title). We are always looking for a reason to celebrate something! (more…)

McDonald’s, Gillette, and Study Skills

Twenty-five years before Ray Kroc opened his first McDonald’s store, he was a struggling “paper cup” salesman in Chicago. It was 1930; the country was in the midst of the prohibition era and soda fountains were rapidly expanding as an alternative to bars. Walgreen’s was leading the way, opening new stores and soda fountains at a feverish pace. (more…)

Why Do Students Love Certain Teachers? Even the “Gumpy” Ones.

If you read my article “How I Was Accused of Child Neglect,” you know we have had some big changes in our household with our first-grader starting a new school this week. So far, we are off to a good start!

Last week, I only described one element of our challenges with the previous school. I chose to avoid getting off on other tangents, but there were other issues that led to our decision to switch schools. (more…)

How I Was Accused of Child Neglect

A week ago today, my husband & I were called into to a meeting with the principal at my son’s school. The topic? His attendance.

My son, Mark, is a first-grader and has had a variety of health and learning issues that we have been sorting through all year. He has seen nine specialists and had a variety of tests, so his absences have been adding up.

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Something Is Desperately Wrong In America!

Have you seen the following statistics?

30% = number of students dropping out of high school in the US.
40% = number of college students who have to take at least one remedial course in college.
50% = number of college students who never complete a degree.
66% = number of high school honor students who fall behind in college. (more…)

How to Keep Strategies “Student-Friendly,” Even for Lazy Students

Parents and teachers get frustrated when students don’t put forth the extra effort to organize themselves and study.

Are they lazy?

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Keeping Education Current – With the World’s Oldest Strategy

**How DO We Make Learning More Relevant?**

One way to bridge this gap is to illustrate the connections between what our students are learning and how that information will help them in “the real world.” As you explain these connections, stories will emerge and students love stories! Watch the body language of students change as you begin to describe a personal experience you have had or something interesting that happened to someone else. They lean in, quiet down, and focus! Stories evoke emotions, emotions bring relevance, and relevance fosters *motivation!* (more…)

Video: The Most Fundamental Learning Strategy

In a previous article, I discussed the #1, most fundamental learning strategy of making connections and described a strategy for learning vocabulary words. It is very simple, yet such a powerful strategy, I decided to make a video of it.

Take a look: (more…)

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Homework Rx Toolkit

Guide for Parents & Students

Featuring: "25 Ways to Make Homework Easier... Tonight!"

SOAR® Study Skills for Primary (K-2): Teacher Training Video

Age-appropriate strategies to help students in grades K-2 learn how to learn strategically, be organized, etc.

SOAR® Study Skills for Intermediate (3-5): Teacher Training Video

Age-appropriate strategies to help students in grades 3-5 learn how to learn strategically, be organized, etc.
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