Showing posts with label academic coaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label academic coaching. Show all posts

Monday, June 27, 2011

Academic Coaching

Academic coaching services play a vital role when it comes to shaping a student's career. They help students analyze their short comings and motivate them to get better. Academic coaching is all about ensuring that students fair well in the examination and show improved results. It is also the responsibility of an academic coach to ensure that students develop interest and passion in a subject and begin to enjoy studies a lot more than before.


Academic Coaching | What to Look for in a Learning Center
(taken from "Ending the Homework Hassle" by John Rosemand)
  • Look for a Learning Center that:
  • Comes highly recommended by other parents and professional
  • Has been in business more than two years
  • Employs teachers who are state-certified and have classroom experience
  • Uses a variety of learning materials, thus enabling adaptation to a broad range of learning styles
  • Uses computer-assisted instruction as a supplement to teacher-based instruction, rather that as a primary instructional technique
  • Retests your child periodically to check his/her progress
  • Guarantees they will contact and continue to communicate with you child's regular classroom teacher
  • Promises to keep you regularly posted concerning your child's progress in their program


What services will Academic Coaching provide?
  • Professional staff and teachers who understand the learning process
  • Diagnostic assessment of your child
  • On going conferences with the parents and teachers
  • Progress testing
  • Personalized program to help your child
  • Prevents students from falling through the cracks

Monday, April 4, 2011

Summer Camp in Charlotte, NC - Accelerated Academic Program


At Swan Learning Center we know that children can excel. Our accelerated summer program is designed to teach students the basics needed to excel in school. The half day and full day programs are three weeks long. Additional weeks may be added especially when parents want children to work on more than one subject area. Before and after camp care is provided along with a full day program.

Registration Details
Times: Half Day Academic Camp
Monday- Thursday 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM or
Monday-Thursday 1:00 PM - 4:00 PM

Dates:
Choose three weeks between June 7 and September 2. Consecutive weeks are preferred for optimal learning retention. Parents choose in which 3 weeks to participate. Additional weeks may be added.

Morning Academic Camp 9 AM -12 PM
Includes Registration, Diagnostic Testing, Morning Snacks, Motivational Program and Progress Assessment when one subject has been the focus of instruction.
Tuition for 3 week camp $795
Additional Week $265

We Offer
• Place where all students achieve
• Diagnostic Testing
• Individualized programs
• Highly motivational Instruction
• Professional certified Teachers
• Unique Reward System
• Summer Camp where students have fun learning

Academic Assessment
Our battery of academic tests and screens identifies your student’s strengths and areas of need. Following the diagnostic testing we will confer with you to determine the specific programs to meet your student’s needs and goals.

Personalized Instruction
Work with teachers who get results. Learn in a positive and open environment where success is everyone’s goal.

Progress Testing
Student’s progress is assessed throughout the program. Progress testing after 30 hours of instruction provides a tangible measure of academic growth.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Back to School in Charlotte!

"CHARLOTTE -- More students, teacher vacancies and transportation changes were just some of the issues facing Charlotte-Mecklenburg school leaders Tuesday as they prepared for the first day of school.

The year begins Wednesday with fewer teachers at CMS after another rollercoaster budget session. Mecklenburg County cuts led to hundreds of layoffs but the district was able to bring back about 140 teachers once the state gave more cash than expected.

CMS says more than 150 teaching positions remain open including dozens in core subjects like English and math.

Not only will the system be short on teachers, but there will be an estimated 1,300 more students enrolled this year than last, thanks in part to a larger-than-usual incoming kindergarten class. The official student tally won’t be known for about a week to 10 days.

Transportation has been another hot topic over the summer. Budget cuts mean magnet transportation shifts to shuttles that will drop off and pickup at 27 locations across the district.

CMS set up a hotline for parents with general back-to-school questions. That number is (980) 343-3000. Staff will be available Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m."
~ Source: Charlotte.News14.com

For more tips on how to help your students this school year, check out the academic coaching services we have available!

Monday, July 26, 2010

Quality Day Care Crucial to Economy

At first, day care quality may seem irrelevant to those without young children. But a growing understanding of early brain development, and its role in later life success, is helping the issue gain traction from the classroom to the boardroom.

The National Research Council has found that 90 percent of brain development occurs before the age of 5 — that is, before public school begins. Studies lasting decades show that children with high-quality day care and preschool experiences are more likely to do well in school, graduate and stay out of jail.
The appeal of creating a higher quality work force and saving tax dollars over time appeals to some business leaders.

“There are a number of states around the U.S. where the business community was leading this work,” said Milton Little, president of United Way of Metro Atlanta. “That wasn’t the case here.”
So United Way created an Early Education Commission, co-chaired by the president of Spelman College and the CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, which made a series of recommendations this spring for improving early childhood learning in the state.

The commission’s report concluded: “The future of Georgia’s children, workforce and economic vitality is in peril if we do not act now to bring strong leadership and increase investment to increase access to high-quality child care and education.”

Dennis Lockhart, co-chairman of the commission and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, said the group spent 18 months gathering information, partly by hearing from national economic development leaders.

“It was a matter of making a case to the business community that its historical focus on K-12 needed to be extended to an earlier point in children’s development, that it is also an economic development issue,” he said. “I came to this with very little knowledge or understanding, but I’m such a convert.”

Brain development and early childhood care
Pat Willis, executive director of the advocacy group Voices for Georgia’s Children, said many people resist the idea of teaching very young children because they picture toddlers crammed into rows of desks. But that’s not how little kids learn. Their activities can be designed to be more educational even though they look like “play” to most adults, she said.

Even babies need stimulating experiences to help their brains develop.
“If we talk about education and infants, we get this look like, ‘What?’” Willis said. “Very important things happen in a child’s brain at that age.”

But not everyone with a business perspective is sold on educational requirements for day cares. It has generally been opposed by rural legislators in Georgia, said state Rep. Kathy Ashe, D-Atlanta, who serves on the House Committee on Children and Youth.

Chuck Thompson, a Macon insurance agent with a 2-year-old in day care, said he thinks the market should determine the instructional content of day care programs.

“We need government regulations to make sure our kids are safe and not harmed, physically or emotionally,” he said. “But (dictating) what day cares have to offer, like regular school? I don’t think that should be required.”

He said competition should drive educational elements. Otherwise, new requirements could drive up costs, making day care less affordable to low-income parents, he said.

That’s why Pam Tatum, CEO of the advocacy group Quality Care for Children, argues that the state needs to subsidize child care needs.

“We have an education system K-12 that is state funded, and we understand the need for that. But research shows that the first five years are when most brain development occurs, and our investment in those years is minimal,” Tatum said.

“So we say the market will take care of it. But if we don’t think the market will take care of it K-12, why would it take care of it 1-4, when adult-child ratios must be higher?” she asked.

Early child care professionals have feared that stiffer requirements might drive them out of business, especially during the recession. But Tatum and others suggest that the state could develop programs to help businesses with the transition and be ready to roll them out once the economy improves.

“Any time there’s pressure to increase quality, there’s going to be some resistance,” Little said. “But this is long term. It’s not an overnight wrenching change that will put people out of business.”
~ Source: Macon.com

To enhance your child's education, start him off with academic coaching. Consider the area they seem to be struggling with, and try out a algebra tutor, reading tutor, or writing tutor.