Chilly Weather Reminds Northern Virginia Students and Parents that the First Quarter Report Card from Public School is Near

Posted Tuesday, October 21, 2008 by Connections Prep
Categories: hire a tutor, northern virginia, private tutoring

Struggling with your student’s FIRST QUARTER GRADES and homework already this schoolyear? Worried about future SOLs and Final Exams? Care if your child gets into the college of their choice? Are you experiencing any of these academic trouble predictors:

  • Is your student struggling with Fall semester already?
  • Have you thought about upcoming Mid-Term Exams and all their quarterly projects and regular weekday homework assignments?
  • Are your kids falling behind on homework or are the progress reports coming back from teachers indicating your student is beginning to have problems in any of their academic subjects or across the board in class?
  • Have you stopped fighting to win and are spending all your energy just trying to get through the next testing round?

With the chill of fall and nearby cold of winter creeping in and chilling parents and students to the bone and new teaching material being presented every day, it can be more and more difficult to stay positive about school this time of year and to “keep up”. Whether students are in Elementary School, Middle School, High School, or just starting out in College, if your student is struggling in school that’s where hiring a private tutor from Tri-ed Tutoring can help; we put student spirit back so they can rise to the challenge of everyday learning.

Our tutors can offer your students a fresh early, mid-year, and final time perspective on academics. By offering new study hints, tips, techniques, and tricks, we can help your student gain comprehension of new material while continuing to reinforce mastery of the old. In an age where applying to college is is more competitive, it is increasingly difficult to be accepted at major universities, and for scholarships class rank truly matters, it doesn’t pay to “wait and see.”

TRI-ED TUTORING. You haven’t tried tutoring until you’ve tried Tri-ED.

expand. exceed. excel.

www.tri-edtutoring.com

Hire a Tutor to Help Make Learning FUN: Study with a SMILE

Posted Monday, October 20, 2008 by Connections Prep
Categories: a+, grades improvement, hire a tutor, private tutoring

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Learning Can Be FUN

TRI-ED TUTORS MAKE LEARNING FUN.

This time of year we have a lot of calls from parents whose students are frustrated and feeling insecure about their progress in their classes at school. Rather than waiting for that failing grade or that failing school year, they are doing the right thing by reaching out and asking for help. They realize that the earlier in life a student receives assistance with their educational foundation, the better off that child will be in the long life and educational run.

If your student is having a hard time keeping up in school overall or in any particular subject in areas like Math [Basic Math, Pre-Algebra, Algebra, Geometry, Statistics, Trigonometry, Pre-Calculus, Calculus], Science [Earth Science, Biology, Chemistry, Life Sciences, Anatomy & Physoology], English [Grammar, Informal Writing, ESL, Literature, Shakespeare, Poetry, Vocabulary, Reading, Research Writing, Formal Academic Essay Composition, Technical Writing], Social Studies [World History, US History, Civics, American Government, Political Science, Philosophy, World Religion, Humanities] , or Basic Study Skills [Study Habits, Organization], consider hiring a tutor now.

Tri-Ed Tutoring is so confident that all students benefit from additional homework and study skills help, if we are not the best agency choice to work with your student then we’ll recommend someone else. Whether you hire us or one of the Washington DC areas other competitive learning centers, we are happy to talk with you as educational consultants. We know how to diagnose your students trouble areas and can advise you on how to proceed.

With final exams, the SAT, and end of grade testing [SOLs] looming just around next semesters corner, don’t wait. It’s better to struggle to reach the top than to fight your way up from the bottom. Our teachers turn student frowns upside down. The best part of working with us? Tri-Ed Tutoring offers reasonable cost options and package discounts to all our families and students, making us one of the best tutoring agency groups around.

TRI-ED TUTORING. You haven’t tried tutoring until you’ve tried Tri-ED.

expand. exceed. excel.

Looking to Hire a Tutor in the DC Metro Region? Our Private Tutors are Ready to Help Students.

Posted Sunday, August 31, 2008 by Connections Prep
Categories: private tutoring

Hire a Tutor

Apple Sitting on a Desk

For more information, contact info@triedtutoring.com.

Tri-Ed Tutoring, LLC
Amanda Medders
Executive Education Consultant
Phone: (703)899-6282
E-mail: amanda.medders@tri-edtutoring.com

Tri-Ed Tutoring provides a wide range of services: we offer both one-on-one instruction, as well as classes geared towards helping your K-12 student prepare for standardized tests.

We serve the following cities/counties in the greater Northern Virginia Area: Manassas, Prince William County, Fairfax, Fairfax County, Loudoun County, Arlington, and Alexandria.

We have special needs tutors and advisers, including ESL language service providers ready and waiting to work with children as private consultation Special Education Specialists across the Baltimore and Washington, DC regions including all areas of Northern Virginia.

We offer home school consultations to students in Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Columbia.

Our tutors come to you. As private tutors, we work from your home or any designated meeting area across the DC Metro region, including from libraries, bookstores, and WIFI friendly restaurants near you.

Pre-School and Young Elementary Students benefit from Storytime Reading

Posted Friday, August 8, 2008 by Connections Prep
Categories: gifted, grades improvement, loudoun

Tags: , , , , ,

Everyone knows that reading stories aloud to children is something fun for kids and parents, too. Beyond sharing traditional bedtime stories, encouraging young children to read for fun AND education is essential to healthy academic development.

By sharing time in circle sessions, youngsters learn not only how to focus their attention on a subject, adventure, and plot line, but they get a chance to practice positive behavior skills that will help them learn to appropriately participate more and more as they grow and are exposed to being in a classroom. Whether your child is from an ESL background, has special needs, is an “average kid”, or falls under the umbrella spectrum term of “Gifted and Talented”, reading and social interaction is all a part of an “academic skills set” they can use as experiential tools to succeed.

Here’s a “storytime” list from Loudoun County public library story time groups available to families around the Northern Virginia and DC Metro Area. We encourage all parents and students to bring reading into every aspect of life to enrich vocabulary, increase analyzation skills, and to broaden the depth of communication. We recommend contacting your own local library system to find our about programs for tots, emerging readers, and elementary K-5 enrichment classes available in your area.

Ashburn Library Storytimes
Ashburn Library
Ongoing

Baby Lapsit (0 to 18 months)
Mondays, 10:00 AM
Saturdays, 11:00 AM
Teen Reading Buddies Storytime (3s to 5s)
Mondays, 4:30 PM & 5:00 PM
Mother Goose Nursery Time (18 to 24 months)
Tuesdays & Thursdays, 10:00 AM
Terrific 2s
Tuesdays & Thursdays, 10:45 AM
Preschool Storytime (3 to 5s)
Tuesdays & Thursdays, 11:30 AM
Wonderful Wednesday Stories (3 to 5s)
Wednesdays, 1:30 PM
Pajama Storytime (3 to 5s)
Wednesdays, 7:00 PM
Saturday Family Storytimes (2 to 5s)
Saturdays, 10:00 AM

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Cascades Library Storytimes
Cascades Library
Ongoing

Lapsits for 2s
Tuesdays, 10:30 AM & Wednesdays, 11:15 AM
Baby Lapsit (0 to 18 months)
Tuesdays & Saturdays, 11:15 AM
Pajama Storytime (2 to 5s)
Tuesdays, 7:00 PM
Storytime for 3s, 4s & 5s
Wednesdays, 10:30 AM & 1:30 PM
After School Book Break (6s to 8s)
Wednesdays, 4:00 PM
May: My Weird School Series by Dan Gutman
June: Katie Kazoo Switcheroo by Nancy Krulik
Last meeting June 11 will resume September 3
Mother Goose Nursery Time (18 to 24 Months)
Thursdays, 10:30 AM
Terrific 3s
Thursdays, 11:15 AM
Teen Reading Buddies (3s to 5s)

Fridays, 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM (starting June 27)

Saturday Family Storytime for 2s to 6s

Saturdays, 10:30 AM Email This E-mail this

Lovettsville Library Storytimes
Lovettsville Library
Ongoing

Storytime for 2s & 3s
Mondays, 10:30 AM
Storytime for 3s, 4s & 5s
Mondays, 1:30 PM

Born to Read Storytime (birth to 24 months)
Wednesdays, 10:30 AM

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Middleburg Library Storytimes
Middleburg Library
Ongoing

Storytime with Book Mouse (2 ½ to 5 year olds)
Tuesdays, 11:00 AM (until June 23)
Mondays, 10:00 AM (June 23 – August 25)

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Purcellville Library Storytimes
Purcellville Library
ongoing
Lapsits for 2s
Tuesdays at 10:15 am

Storytime for 3s, 4s & 5s
Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 11:15 am

Family Storytime for 4s, 5s & 6s
Wednesdays at 7:00 pm

Saturday Morning Storytime (3s, 4s & 5s)
Saturdays at 11:15 am

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Rust Library Story Times
Rust Library
Ongoing

These storytimes are held at 34-D Catoctin Circle
Teen Reading Buddies Stories (3s to 5s)
Mondays, 4:00 PM (May 12th, June 2nd, June 16th, July 7th, July 21st)

Lapsits for 2s

Tuesdays, 10:30 AM
Mother Goose Nursery Time (18 to 24 months)
Wednesdays, 11:15 AM
Storytime for 3s, 4s & 5s
Wednesdays, 4:00 PM & Thursdays, 11:00 AM

Saturday Family Storytime (3 to 5s)

Saturdays, 11:00 AM

Sponsored by Rust Library. Email This E-mail this

Sterling Library Storytimes
Sterling Library
Ongoing

Mother Goose Storytime (18-24 months)
Wednesdays, 11:15 AM


Preschool Storytime (
3s to 5s)

Thursdays, 4:00 PM & Fridays, 11:00 AM
Family Storytimes (3s to 10s)
Saturdays, 11:00 AM

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Tri-Ed Tutoring Offers Academic Support to Families and Children Struggling with Academics in Northern Virginia and the DC Metro Region

Posted Friday, August 1, 2008 by Connections Prep
Categories: grades improvement, hire a tutor, private tutoring

Tags: , , , ,

How do I know if my son or daughter needs a private tutor or could use an academic mentor as a support system during the school year?

There are several signs that your child would benefit from a personal tutor or “coach” who can help them through their difficulties with school and studies. Some signs include:

  1. a sudden drop in the student’s grades,
  2. difficulty completing homework assignments,
  3. incomplete homework or class work,
  4. lack of confidence or strong dislike of the subject matter,
  5. weak study skills,
  6. test anxiety and/or
  7. poor organizational skills.

A personal tutor can help target a student’s weak areas and help them work to improve in those areas. Visit http://tutoringnva.wordpress.com to see all the different ways Tri-Ed Tutoring of Northern Virginia can help.
We teach all ages of students from children through adult. Whether teaching or mentoring in English, Math, Social Studies, Science, or tutoring students through SAT Prep classes and SAT Comprehensive Reviews, Tri-Ed Tutoring is here for you.
Ask around the Northern Virginia and Washington DC areas and you will soon find out. We’re great tutors providing convenient services for reasonable costs.

www.tri-edtutoring.com

expand. exceed. excel.

Amanda Medders Video Talks to Students about PREPARING FOR FINALS

Posted Monday, June 23, 2008 by Connections Prep
Categories: private tutoring, professional tutors for hire

Tags: ,

Interested in a preview of the teaching style and to hear academic tips from one of our favorite tutors, Tri-Ed Tutoring’s founder Amanda Medders?

Check out How to Prepare for Finals: Tri-Ed Tutoring on monkeysee.com for tips on studying for finals or other cumulative exams. The video segment includes information on setting and sticking to a study schedule, organizing and using your class materials, tackling different types of test questions, and relieving test anxiety.

For help putting these tips to use, please contact us to find out how a private tutor can benefit your son or daughter by hiring us to work with your student through one of our specialized classes or services. We are easy to reach–just email contactus@tri-edtutoring.com or visit www.tri-edtutoring.com for easy, online registration.

Get Ready for SUMMER 2008

Posted Friday, May 23, 2008 by Connections Prep
Categories: summer activities

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Looking forward to a long, lazy summer for 2008 or are you hoping to find some great new opportunities to do something educational with your kids? Here’s a great article from www.kidsource.com excerpted from the National Association for the Education of Young Children that outlines some stress-free suggestions about what you and your kids can do.

It’s summertime, school is out, and many families are at their wit’s end about how to fill three months of their children’s free time.

Images of summertime are usually cast in a light of hot, lazy, relaxing days by a lake, but the reality for most working families is the struggle to balance the demands of adult work schedules with providing safe activities for children. This dilemma often results in hectic, stress-filled days comparable to those during the school year. While summer camp is an option for some, the cost of day and overnight camps can be too expensive for many families’ budgets. Structured activities are beneficial, but parents and caregivers should also keep in mind the advantages of unstructured time for children.

So what do we do to keep young children busy, yet also allow them to enjoy the summer months? Whether your child is a preschooler or school-age, a wealth of opportunities for fun, educational, and even relaxing activities are possible. Here are some tips that may be useful for families and caregivers:

Visit the library

Until recently, libraries offered little or nothing for children below the age of three, but in the past few years, many have introduced programs for toddlers. Children and adults can participate in activities that may include reading aloud, storytelling, fingerplays, rhymes, and songs. Preschoolers usually enjoy the group activities offered by libraries, where they can participate in puppet shows and arts and crafts activities. For elementary school children, there are variations of the read-alouds and storytelling hours that often include discussions and presentations by the children themselves, as well as summer reading programs. Many public libraries also offer training courses for children in using different software or educational programs.

Discover geography

What makes a place special? What are the physical characteristics of your hometown? Take children for a walk around your neighborhood and look at what makes it unique. Point out how it is similar to other places you have been and how it is different. If you live near a park, a lake, a river, a stream or a creek, take your children there and spend time talking about its uses. Read stories about distant places with children or sing songs to teach geography, for example “Home on the Range” or “California, Here I Come.” Make a wish list of places you would like to visit with your child. Look them up on a map and plan a trip there–real or pretend.

View and create collections

Go to a children’s museum to view hands-on exhibits or suggest that your children start a “collection” and build their own museum. They can collect natural materials, such as acorns and leaves from a local park or sea shells from the beach.

Nature’s best

Older children can learn about weather by using a map to look up the temperature of cities around the world and discovering how hot each gets in the summer. Watch cloud formations and imagine. Do the shapes look like horses, ducks or other animals?

At night, children can collect fireflies in jars, or depending on their age, camp out in a tent in the back yard. Create a treasure map for children to find hidden treats in the yard. Read about your state bird and state flower, and if possible, bicycle ride to a nearby park to find them.

Use community resources

Watch for special events, such as free outdoor music festivals or concerts. Many communities host evening concerts in local parks–pack a picnic dinner and enjoy time with your family. People are resources too–collectors, painters, and backyard naturalists may live in your neighborhood, eager to share their knowledge with children.

Rainy day activities

Summertime often brings thunder clouds. On days when outdoor activities are not possible, you can share family history and photos with your children. Pull out the old videotapes of past family gatherings and events. Prepare an indoor picnic with your child or cook dinner together.

Whatever the activity, children can enjoy and appreciate the summer months in ways that are both educational and stress-reducing for all involved.


Credits

National Association for the Education of Young Children
1509 16th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20036-1426
Phone: 202-232-8777; 800-424-2460
FAX: 202-328-1846
E-mail: pubaff@naeyc.org
Web: http://www.naeyc.org/

Copyright © 1997 by National Association for the Education of Young Children.

Understanding Directions: Essay Test Tips and Tricks from How-To-Study.com

Posted Sunday, May 4, 2008 by Connections Prep
Categories: private tutoring

Direction Words In Essay Test Items

Excerpted from how-to-study.com.

Most essay test items are not presented in the form of a question. Instead, they are often presented as a statement that includes a direction word. The direction word tells you what you should do when you write your answer to the item. Look for the direction word and be sure to do what it tells you to do.

Here are the direction words that are most frequently used by teachers when they write essay test items. The meaning of each direction word is provided and is followed by an example of an essay test item using that direction word. Get to know what each of these direction words tells you to do.

AnalyzeAnalyze tells you to break something down into its parts and show how the parts relate to each other to make the whole.

Analyze the factors that contribute to good health.

Compare – Compare tells you to show how two or more things are BOTH similar and different.

Compare the forms of government found in the United States and in China.

Contrast – Contrast tells you to show how two or more things are different.

Contrast the Republican and Democratic political platforms.

Define – Define tells you to explain the meaning of something in a brief, specific manner.

Define what is meant by “living life to the fullest.”

Describe – Describe tells you to present a full and detailed picture of something in words to include important characteristics and qualities.

Describe what it was like to live in ancient Rome.

Diagram – Diagram tells you to illustrate something by drawing a picture of it and labeling its parts.

Diagram a modern commercial jet airplane.

Evaluate – Evaluate tells you to present both the positive and negative characteristics of something.

Evaluate the impact of rap music on American youth.

Explain – Explain tells you to provide facts and reasons to make something clear and understandable.

Explain why the American Civil War occurred.

Justify – Justify tells you to provide reasons and facts in support of something.

Justify the need for the federal income tax.

List – List tells you to present information about something as a series of brief numbered points.

List the ingredients needed to bake bread.

Outline – Outline tells you to present the most important information about something in a carefully organized manner.

Outline what it takes to be successful in school.

Summarize – Summarize tells you to present the main points about something in a brief form.

Summarize how Thomas Edison’s inventions have made our lives better.

Trace – Trace tells you to present the order in which something occurred.

Trace the major events that led to America’s Declaration of Independence.

Recognizing these direction words and knowing what they tell you to do will help you do well when taking an essay test.

A special thank you from Tri-Ed Tutors and Students for access to such a great list of examples from © How-To-Study.com–this site is a great home school resource, too!

Homeschool Educators Need Backup, Too!

Posted Sunday, May 4, 2008 by Connections Prep
Categories: northern virginia, private tutoring, professional tutors for hire

Tags: , ,

Hire a Private Tutor


 

Home school families need tutors, too–whether it is during the year or for a special class or remediation that can be done during summer school. If your child has taken an interest in a subject you are not fully comfortable teaching (especially in subjects like advanced Math or Science), Tri-Ed Tutoring offers great private tutoring rates to homeschoolers and study buddies in their community. It’s also nice to let your kids have the opportunity to be exposed to different teaching methods and styles, too!

Visit www.tri-edtutoring.com for more information, and their new “Parents, Students and Tutors” blog for educational tips and helpful links for our community (www.tutorINnva@wordpress.com).

Working with students from elementary, middle, high school, and college, the tutors at Tri-Ed Tutoring love working with creative students devoted to learning. We are unit study or individual lesson plan friendly. Many of our tutors have their own teaching materials created already for summer school lesson plans, and they are ideally suited for homeschool students, too!

If you are concerned that your child may need exposure to alternate teaching methods or styles, hiring a personal tutor to work with them can be incredibly helpful to do. Whether you work with one of our Educational Specialists for a day, a week, a month, or a year, we can provide parents much needed time to tend to their own lives and work task for a few hours a week, too.

www.tri-edtutoring.com

Email: contactus@tri-edtutoring.com  

Tips and Tricks for Improving Scores on the Reading Comprehension Sections of the S.A.T.

Posted Sunday, April 27, 2008 by Connections Prep
Categories: private tutoring

Tags:

CRITICAL READING Section — READING COMPREHENSION (Short and Long)

 

  1. You should base your answers to the questions solely on what is stated or implied in the passages.
  2. Read the italicized introductory text.
  3. Skip questions you don’t know. Return to them after answering other easier questions.
  4. First and last sentences of each paragraph are critical.
  5. Find the right spot in a passage by using any line reference numbers that appear in the questions.
  6. Answer questions on familiar topics before unfamiliar topics.
  7. Read the passages before reading the questions.
  8. Don’t waste time memorizing details.
  9. Passage content comes from the Humanities, Social Science, Science, and Literal Fiction.
  10. Some passages are presented in pairs. Read the brief introduction first to see how they relate.
  11. Spend more time on answering the questions than on reading the text.

Excerpted from http://www.testinfo.net/sat/sat-tips.htm