Families with students who have learning differences, or specialized needs that impact their academics, should strongly consider working with an in-home tutor. One-on-one, in-home tutoring has been repeatedly proven to be highly effective, particularly for students with specific learning disabilities. Professional educators who can come to the student’s home, such as those available through Club Z! Tutoring, can help students make significant gains in the classroom. In addition, an in-home tutor can help build a child’s self-confidence, both inside and outside of the classroom!
Throughout your child’s academic career, parents are inundated with acronyms – GPA, SAT, ACT, etc. Parents of students with learning differences have an entire alphabet soup of scholastic terms to contend with, from ADD to IEP. With the right team of academic professionals, including your child’s classroom teacher, instructional aide, paraprofessional, and principal, an IEP can help drive the instructional programming to ensure that children who learn and process information differently are not left behind.
IEP stands for Individualized Education Program. IEP’s are assigned to any public school student who receives special education or related services. The idea is to provide a completely individualized instructional program based on the special needs and necessary accommodations of that student. According to the Department of Education, “the IEP is the cornerstone of a quality education for each child with a disability.”
Developing and implementing a successful IEP requires a tremendous amount of teamwork! Parents, teachers, school personnel, and sometimes even the student must work together to create an educational program that will help the student progress in the classroom. Asking an education advocate, such as a Club Z! Area Director, to join you for the IEP development, or simply sharing the IEP strategies with your Club Z! Area Director can really aid in the student’s outcomes with in-home tutoring as well.
Outlined below is the general process of developing an IEP:
If your child has an IEP and you feel that he or she is still not making progress, it’s important that you request to meet with your IEP team as soon as possible. During that meeting, it will be important to review the services your child is receiving, how frequent these services are being administered, and progress made toward meeting the stated goals and objectives in the IEP. It may also make sense to request documentation such as assessment results and work samples. You may also bring your own documentation (i.e. notes from phone conversations, in-person meetings, email communication etc.) to the meeting.
Remember – you can also bring a friend or family member with you to act as a second set of ears and help you digest the information provided during the meeting. The more prepared you are when you attend these meetings, the more effective the meetings will be in achieving your specific goals and helping your child succeed.
Enlisting the help of a trained, professional tutor is also a great step in helping your child succeed. With Club Z! Tutoring, instruction is individualized for each student based on his/her specific learning needs and challenges. And Club Z! has had the distinct privilege of tutoring thousands of students with mild to moderate learning disabilities, IEP and 504 plans, and more. Club Z!’s one-on-one approach to learning has been statistically proven to be effective in improving reading and math skills for students with learning disabilities. Club Z! tutors work with the student’s classroom curriculum, or can incorporate a number of proven curriculum options from Club Z!, including study skills development, reading and writing improvement, and supplemental instruction for reading and math. To find a Club Z! tutor near you, call Club Z! today at 800-434-2582.
No matter how you look at it, college is an expensive proposition these days. Both public and private colleges and universities have had to raise fees and tuition as costs have increased. As a result, college student debt has skyrocketed and many students end up with loan payments years, sometimes even decades, after graduation. But with some careful planning and creative thinking, there are lots of other ways to help pay for college and avoid being stuck with big loan payments after graduation. One final but important step in the college application process is to include an application for financial aid.
As parents, and grandparents for that matter, we consider it to be a bit of a rite of passage to tell our children just how easy they have it compared to what we went through at their age. File this under the “when I was your age, I had to walk 2 miles to school each day, uphill both ways” category.
For any parent of a college-bound student, SAT and ACT test scores are no doubt at the center of most dinner table discussions. While no one will argue that test scores alone are the deciding factor in college admissions, and many colleges are moving toward a test-optional admissions policy, strong scores on the SAT and or ACT can definitely help a student’s chance of gaining admission to his/her college of choice.