High-Functioning Trafford June Meeting: ALL Welcome

Come to a High-Functioning Trafford for help with Asperger's and high-functioning autism.

Come to a High-Functioning Trafford for help with Asperger’s and high-functioning autism.

Regular readers of the Better Tuition blog will recall our mentions of a support group for young people in Trafford with high-functioning autism/ Asperger’s. The group is being set up by soon-to-be-published writer and autism campaigner (amongst other things) Jayne Dillon, assisted by Urmston community activist George Devlinlocal councillor Joanne Harding and with support from our local MP, Kate Green.  The group’s next meeting is at Costa Coffee in Urmston’s Eden Square at 7pm on Wednesday, 5th June.  All are welcome and a formal diagnosis is not necessary.

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Year 1 Phonics Screening Check 2013: What You Need to Know

Year 1 phonics screening checks will be carried out in the week commencing Monday 17th June 2013.  The checks will also be carried out on Year 2 children who did not reach the required standard in 2012.

Many parents are keen to understand what the checks are about and how they will be carried out – you can find a quick Year 1 phonics screening check who, what, why, where and when here on the Better Tuition website.

Find out about the Year 1 phonics screening check at www.bettertuition.co.uk

The checks have generated a fair amount of debate, especially among teachers and parents who believe that children already undergo too much formal assessment.  We precised this on our blog last year – read the post here.  Many experts feel that children are being set up to fail with a test that was too difficult for most of them.  Michael Rosen has some fine points to make about the checks and the dangers of administering a test with ‘inbuilt failure’ to Year 1 children.

When the test was rolled out nationally in 2012, the pass rate was just 58% (62% of girls and 54% of boys – quite a gap).  Only 44% of those on free school meals attained a pass mark in 2012’s Year 1 phonics screening check.  The 2012 pass mark was 32 out of 40; this year’s pass mark won’t be available until the week of the test.

Link to Department for Education FAQ here.

The DfE has also admitted that, “Setting a more rigorous standard in the phonics check…will help schools to ensure their pupils are secure at level 2 by the end of KS1.”  In other words, the Department for Education believes that the existence of a screening check with a (thus far) two thirds failure rate will force schools to drive up standards – a highly controversial statement.

We don’t offer tuition aimed at the Year 1 phonics screening check at the Better Tuition Centre in Urmston: we take the view that phonics is only one aspect of learning to read and should never be taught in isolation.  We do help Year 1 children who are struggling to pick up reading, writing or maths as early intervention is important when a child is having difficulties.

Our advice to parents is to take the Year 1 phonics screening check as it comes and to remember that children develop as readers at different ages.  In other words, don’t panic if your child doesn’t meet the ‘required’ standard.  Your child’s school will probably have sent some practice work to help them prepare for the Year 1 phonics screening check, so by all means have a look over this together with your child.

School will inform you if your child does not attain the threshold (pass mark), but your child should most definitely not be made to feel a failure.  Children learn at different rates and some take quite a lot longer than others to pick up reading: it doesn’t mean they will always be lagging behind their schoolmates.

If you are worried about any aspect of your child’s education and you would like a more thorough – free – assessment, you can call Paul Syrett or Christine McLaughlin at Better Tuition on 0161 748 3912 and arrange this.

 

Free images from FreeDigitalPhotos.net

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Walk to School: Discover, Explore, Create

The walk to school is rich with educational possibilities.

An early morning walk to school is the perfect way to start the day.  Walking to school means you and your child can explore the environment, discover new things and it doesn’t hurt that it builds exercise in to our day.  The home-to-school walk offers easy quality time (assuaging irrational guilt if you’re working late) and a chance to chat about the day ahead.

Walking to school has been in the news this week: an article on the BBC website brought to my attention the charity Living Streets which aims ‘to create safe, attractive, enjoyable streets where it’s great to walk’.  A survey commissioned by Living Streets as part of their Walk to School Week had found that fewer and fewer children are walking to school.

The issue is a complex one: parents may work long hours and children often attend a school that’s simply not within sensible walking distance.  This is a particular issue here in Trafford.  It is commonplace for secondary students to travel from Urmston to locations as far-flung as Knutsford (15 miles away) or Hale Barns (12 miles away). Walking to school is not always a practical option.

My own son’s school is a bit of a hike at 1.1 miles.  The railway line and a preponderance of golf courses mean the area between  our house and school is not densely populated, hence the wider-than-usual catchment area.  A warm drive to school can be tempting when the weather is wild, yet whenever I find myself driving to school, I regret it as soon as I arrive at the first set of traffic lights.  The sheer stress of dealing with other drivers, waiting in jams and the constant need to ensure one is not running over someone else’s child presents a grim start to the day.

The walk to school, on the other hand, offers an experience rich with educational possibilities – from learning about road safety to gaining an understanding of the changing seasons.  Here are some of the activities we have enjoyed on our walks to school.

Explore

Whatever your route to school, there is lots to explore.

Whatever your route to school, there is lots to explore.

 

Whether you live in an urban area or a rural paradise, there are generally alternative routes you can explore.  Visit www.walkit.com to input your starting location and destination to find different routes for your walk.  We generally choose to walk over the muddy, overgrown paths by the railway line as they offer an escape from the urban landscape, but there is also a route past the churchyard (history lessons are abundant in the gravestones) and a field with goats, donkeys and cows and a more metropolitan route past houses and shops.

Discover

The walk to school helps your child engage with nature.

The walk to school helps your child engage with nature.


The walk to school is a great way to engage with nature, note the changing of the seasons and begin to find out how the world works.  You can help your child get more out of the walk to school by pointing out different features in the environment, such as new leaves appearing on trees, how the sky looks, or whether the light is changing as you walk. My little boy got a microscope for Christmas and we sometimes take a jam jar to fill with ‘interesting specimens’ for later inspection.  Good specimens include leaves, fallen petals or recently deceased bugs or worms.  You can also take photos, rub trees or pause to sketch if you are super-organised and leave early enough.

Create

Many an artistic creation can be put together from found detritus on the school walk, but we employ our walk-to-school creativity in a more cerebral manner.  Making up stories is great fun and there is always inspiration in the local landscape.  A larger-than-average snail recently sparked a marvellous saga about a giant superhero mollusc; then there was the tale of the enchanted tornado, powered entirely by trainers discarded at the roadside. Lots of our stories are about trees.  Children love coming up with stories without the pressure of translating them to written form.  We make them up, taking turns to contribute, and then we forget them.  The beauty of the exercise is that it encourages the generation of ideas, good and bad: essential for developing creativity.

The walk to school is a good time to test spellings or times tables in a low-pressure environment, but sometimes we just walk along in silence.  Living Streets has lots of information about the health and environmental benefits of walking to school, as well as ideas for walking schemes.  Walking to school is not practical or possible for everyone but the advantages are huge, so do try it if you are able and see how much you and your child(ren) enjoy it.

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SPAG: Online Quizzes in Spelling, Punctuation and Grammar

Try some SPAG quizzes.

Spelling, Punctuation and Grammar Quizzes are fun.

As the government rolls out its new Spelling, Punctuation and Grammar (SPAG) test this week in schools, grammar has become a topic of discussion for many.  Better Tuition‘s team of qualified grammar gurus (i.e. teachers) has explored the internet to bring you the best of the online quizzes, some of which are designed to elicit sympathy for the poor Year 6 students facing a barrage of questions about subordinating clauses, dangling participles and apostrophes of contraction.  None of these SPAG quizzes will take you longer than five minutes, so what are you waiting for?

Grammar

Do you fancy yourself as a bit of a grammar geek? The Guardian provides 14 satisfyingly answerable questions, while the BBC’s quiz is rather a cut above, but if you are a true grammar geek, try these ten questions from the Times; teachers who answer the final question correctly can come and work for us at Better Tuition.

Punctuation

Test your knowledge of punctuation – including the fancy kind that ‘proves you went to college’ – courtesy of Bristol University.

If you find punctuation tricky, you might want to read our post on how to use apostrophes or take a look at this useful infographic on the Oxford comma.

Spelling

Warm up your spelling muscles with the Guardian’s 20 tricky spellings quiz.

Are you or your child preparing to sit the Spelling, Punctuation and Grammar test?   You can download our grammar checklist (we also have a checklist for level 6). [Update: national curriculum levels are no longer in use; instead your child will receive a standardised score. A score of 100 indicates that your child is meeting national expectations.]

If your child needs extra help with grammar, spelling, reading, writing, maths, science or entrance exams preparation, please get in touch with Better Tuition‘s team of expert, qualified teachers on 0161 748 3912.  We’ll be happy to book your FREE assessment in our welcoming, professional tuition centre in the heart of Urmston.

Image courtesy of [stockimages] / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

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The Oxford Comma: an Infographic

Children in Year 6 classes all over England and Wales will today sit the Grammar, Punctuation and Spelling test for the first time, sparking discussion about the importance of grammar.  This handy infographic, from onlineschools.com, focuses on the Oxford comma, one of the more hotly debated punctuation items.

The Oxford Comma
Courtesy of: OnlineSchools.com

Better Tuition’s sage advice is to use the Oxford comma where it clarifies meaning but to leave it out where it doesn’t perform any specific function.  If you like grammar, read our post on how to use apostrophes.  If you or your child is preparing to sit the Grammar, Punctuation and Spelling test you can download our grammar checklist (we also have a checklist for level 6).

Good luck to all those who are taking the test and, if your child needs extra help with grammar, spelling, reading, writing, maths, science or entrance exams preparation, please get in touch with Better Tuition‘s team of expert, qualified teachers on 0161 748 3912.  We’ll be happy to book your FREE assessment in our welcoming, professional tuition centre in the heart of Urmston.

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Pottering around Better Tuition, Urmston

Better Tuition: celebrating five fantastic years of tuition on the corner of Crofts Bank Rd.

Better Tuition: celebrating five fantastic years of tuition on the corner of Crofts Bank Rd.

Better Tuition is celebrating five fantastic years of tuition here on the corner of Crofts Bank Rd, and this well known young man helped us  out at the weekend. As a thank you for our customer’s support, Mr P handed out oodles of lollies and balloons to the children in Urmston town centre.

Better Tuition: celebrating five fantastic years of tuition on the corner of Crofts Bank Rd.

Better Tuition: celebrating five fantastic years of tuition on the corner of Crofts Bank Rd.

If your child needs extra help, please go ahead and contact Paul Syrett or Christine McLaughlin on 0161 748 3912 to book a FREE assessment.    Our teachers are all fully qualified, CRB checked and experts in their field.  Whatever your educational issue, we can help.

 

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Celebrating five fantastic years of tuition in Stretford and Urmston

Better Tuition is celebrating!

Better Tuition is celebrating!

Better Tuition is celebrating five fantastic years of tuition on the corner of Crofts Bank and Flixton Rd this week and we would like to offer our sincere thanks to the people of Urmston and Stretford for their kind support and custom.

Five years ago, as the economy began its awkward lurch towards recession, we stood at the foot of a mountain so tall we could barely see the summit.  We had decided to start our own business and after many months of preparation (lease negotiations, planning permission, decorating our new premises inside and out) we opened the doors of our new tuition centre (initially under a different name, history buffs).

We both arrived nice and early in order to deal with our expected inundation of telephone calls.  We sat at the desk, facing each other, and waited.  After ninety minutes the phone rang: it was someone looking for the golf shop.  They had dialed incorrectly and  seemed to view our proffered SATs booster lessons as a poor substitute for a forged iron.

It was a slow day: we didn’t have any customers so there weren’t any lessons to plan.  All the pencils were new so didn’t need sharpening.  Facebook had barely been invented and Twitter was just a twinkle in a programmer’s eye.  To be quite honest, it was a slow year: 2008 was not a good year to be starting a business.  The back of our sofa was frequently searched for loose change/ mortgage payments over the months that followed.

Things sped up over time (about two years) and, missing out a lot of stuff that would frankly bore you, today we are celebrating five years of tuition on the corner of Crofts Bank Rd with close to 120 customers.  We couldn’t have achieved this without the support of the people of Stretford and Urmston, to whom we owe an enthusiastic vote of thanks.

 

Few things could ever beat the satisfaction of helping a child conquer maths demons, pass an important exam or develop simple literacy skills. For us it is also so important that we are able to employ local people so that the money Better Tuition makes stays in the local community. We make a point of spending our money in small, local businesses and we love knowing that we are part of the community.

Five years ago we stood at the foot of a mountainous learning curve while the country’s economy teetered on the brink of a precipice. Better Tuition could not have survived without the loyalty of our customers. We hope to repay you with many more years of dedicated service.

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Autism Living Library Event at Urmston Library

Find out more about Autism Awareness Month at lightitupblue.org

April is Autism Awareness month. On Tuesday 16th April Trafford Council will be raising awareness of autism in Trafford by holding an Autism Living Library event in Urmston Library. A Human Library works very much like a regular library. Members of the public can go in, browse a list or catalogue of Books and ask a member of staff to borrow their chosen title. The difference is that Books are people, and reading is a conversation!

This intriguing event, which aims to educate the general public about autism, starts at 3:30pm today (Tuesday, 16th April 2013) and ends at  18:30pm.  If you would like further information, contact organiser Jane Forrest on 0161 912 2807 or via email at jane.forrest@trafford.gov.uk.

Better Tuition is looking forward to hosting the next meeting of Trafford’s new support group for young people with Asperger’s syndrome or high-functioning autism on 24th April 2013.  You can find more details here.

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Autism Awareness Month: April 2013

April is Autism Awareness Month and World Autism Awareness Day on 2nd April was observed and celebrated across the world, from Islamabad to Ilford and Ipanema.  More than one in every 100 people is autistic and diagnostic rates are increasing all the time, so it’s really important to be autism-aware at all times of the year.

Newly formed support group for young people with Asperger's/ high-functioning autism.

Newly formed support group for young people with Asperger’s/ high-functioning autism.

We went to a pebble trail event in Lymm, which had been organised by Picthatevent, a local company who make personalised story books for children who suffer from autism/ Asperger’s/ anxiety.  Village traders had turned their windows blue for the day and there were posters and an awareness raising blue pebble trail around the village with flags, balloons and a biscuit at the end of the trail. The event raised money for the National Autistic Society.

As you may be aware, Better Tuition is hosting a meeting for a newly formed support group for children and young people with Asperger’s/ high-functioning autism.  The meeting is on Wednesday, 24th April at 7.30pm.  We want as many people as possible to find out about this.  Please print off a copy of the poster and distribute it wherever you think it will be useful:

meeting poster-colour

meeting poster-grayscale

The posters are in Word format.

The group (which still has no name) aims to support young people with or without a formal diagnosis of Asperger’s Syndrome/ High-functioning autism.  Please visit the group’s forum at www.traffordasd.com, or email for more information.  You can also follow the group on Twitter – so please do!

 

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Year 6 SATs: Grammar, Punctuation and Spelling (Level 6) Checklist

Read Better Tuition's Grammar, Punctuation and Spelling checklists for Key Stage 2 SATs.

Read Better Tuition’s Grammar, Punctuation and Spelling checklists for Key Stage 2 SATs.

This test is being introduced in May for all Year 6 students.  Read our previous post on changes to Year 6 SATs.  You can use Better Tuition’s checklist to help you ensure your child has covered everything s/he needs for the test.  You can read the checklist below or download it as a PDF.  The Level 6 test will be 20 minutes long and may cover everything on the Level 3 – 5 test as well as the following areas: 

 

 

 

Example(s)

 
 

Types of Noun

 

 

 
 

Abstract nouns

 

happiness

 
 

Collective nouns

 

flock (of sheep)

 
 

Noun phrases

Noun = book

Noun phrase = the big book on the shelf

 
Personal pronouns  

I, you, he, she, it, we, etc.

 
Relative pronouns  

which, that, who, whom, etc.

 
Possessive pronouns  

mine, yours, his, hers etc.

 
 

Types of Adverb

 

 

 
Adverbs of manner  

happily, quickly

 
 

Adverbs of time

 

soon, later

 
Adverbs of frequency  

often, seldom

 
 

Adverbs of place

 

here, there, everywhere, around

 
 

Punctuation

 

 

 
 

Semi-colons

 

;

 
 

Colons

 

:

 
 

Verb forms

 

 

 
 

Active voice

 

Daniel won the competition.

 
 

Passive voice

 

The competition was won by Daniel.

 
Infinitive verb forms  

to go, to see, to think, etc.

 
Language features  

 

 
Antonyms

(opposites)

big/ small

good/ bad

 
Subordinating

connectives

Subordinating connectives link a main clause with a subordinate clause.

e.g. if, although, when, while, since, because

 
Co-ordinating connectives Co-ordinating connectives link words or phrases which are of equal importance.

e.g. but, so, and

 

SATs preparation is important in order to give your child confidence to tackle these important tests.  Your child’s results will be passed on to their new secondary school and very often used to set them according to ability.  If you need extra help, please do not hesitate to contact Paul Syrett or Christine McLaughlin on 0161 748 3912 to book a FREE assessment.  Many parents send their children to Better Tuition to help prepare them for Year 7.  Please give us a call to find out how your child could benefit from lessons at Better Tuition.

 

 

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