Summer Reading Program at PRIDE Learning Center

Summer Reading Program at PRIDE Learning Center

Summer is the perfect time to catch up and get ahead! At PRIDE Learning Center we offer a fantastic summer reading program to give students a giant boost in their weakest areas. Our summer reading camp is the most popular program of the year!

 

This intensive one-on-one reading, writing and comprehension program utilizes our multi-sensory, phonemic, Orton-Gillingham approach that we at PRIDE Learning Center are experts at. This program helps kids in a way that a regular summer school program would not. Student’s progress one entire reading level in 4-5 weeks!

 

PRIDE’s fun-filled yet intensive one-on-one reading camp has become so popular that we even draw families from all over the globe. Recent students have come to PRIDE from France, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, England, and Germany.

 

Summer Catch – Up Program

Do in 4 weeks what would normally take 30-40 weeks!

Our PRIDE Intensive reading program offers dramatic results. Our reading specialists will provide the needed support to get students at grade level during the long summer months. Your child still gets a summer break, as sessions are typically only 3 hours a day five days a week. Don’t worry, there is still plenty of time in the day to play, go to the beach or just relax.

 

Sample Daily Schedule:

 

9:00 – 10:30 Orton-Gillingham Reading Instruction

10:30 – 11:00 Snack, Fun and Movement

11:00 – 11:30 Writing Instruction

11:30 – 12:00 Orton-Gillingham Reading Instruction

 

You can sign up for any weeks between June 26th – August 4  to accommodate busy schedules and traveling families. For best results, we recommend 4 uninterrupted weeks.

 

Tuition  per weekly session is $1125.00  PRIDE lessons are always One-on-One

 

We have locations in Calabasas, Sherman Oaks, Studio City, Pasadena, Hancock Park, Beverly Hills, Brentwood, Redondo Beach, Newport Beach/Irvine, Mission Viejo, Yorba Linda, Temecula, Carlsbad and San Diego!

 

Click Here To Register

 

Or Call us Today at 866-774-3342 for a registration form or email us at info@pridelearningcenter.com or visit our website at www.pridelearningcenter.com

Camp for Kids with Learning Disabilities Expands to San Diego

Camp for Kids with Learning Disabilities Expands to San Diego

PRIDE Learning Center announces the opening of its seasonal summer location in San Diego, California. A Camp for Kids!

 

PRIDE Learning Center, which specializes in tutoring children with learning disabilities and special needs, will provide instruction this summer at a Seasonal Learning Center in San Diego, located at the University City Chabad Center, 3813 Governor Drive, San Diego, CA 92122.

 

Summer instruction for children will be available 9:00am – 12:00pm Monday – Friday from June – August.

 

This summer camp is designed for children of all ages who are struggling with reading, writing and comprehension due to the diagnosis of dyslexia, auditory and visual processing disorder, autism, speech delays and other learning difficulties. The PRIDE Learning Center program is based on Orton-Gillingham research, which uses the multisensory elements of seeing, hearing, touching and moving.

 

“This San Diego Summer Camp is an extension of our Orange County Learning Centers which allows more families in the San Diego community to get the help they need for their children,” states Karina Richland owner of PRIDE Learning Centers. “Our goal at PRIDE, as it has been at all of our locations, is to deliver the highest level of instruction possible and help every child out there, even those that many teachers have given up on.”

 

The rise of one-on-one instruction for children with learning disabilities is becoming almost essential in the San Diego communities. Due to heightened program cutbacks for students in the public, private and governmental programs, parents are desperately seeking outside resources to help their children receive the proper interventions necessary to succeed in school.

 

“PRIDE Learning Center has helped so many students learn how to read,” says Karina Richland, owner of the San Diego Summer Reading Camp. “I see students improve dramatically in just one summer. I am so excited for the San Diego Community to experience and be a part of our wonderful program.”

 

 

Individuals interested in the summer reading camp at PRIDE Learning Center in San Diego can call (866) 774-3342 or email info@pridelearningcenter.com. A summer registration form is on the website at www.pridelearningcenter.com

 

 

Spelling Help

Spelling Help

I know many adults who truly believe that they cannot spell, saying “I can’t spell” in the same manner that they would say, “I can’t swim.” But spelling, like swimming, can be taught. However, while most teachers know how to test for spelling, very few know how to teach spelling.

There is a misconception that spelling is a form of dyslexia, a disorder where one is unable to recognize words or sound them out phonetically. The acts of reading and writing occur mainly in the left temporal lobe of your brain – the part of the brain near your left ear. The act of spelling, however, occurs mainly in the occipital lobe of your brain – the visual cortex in the back of your head responsible for forming and retrieving visual memories. So, to remember how to spell a word, you must first store the memory of that word, and then retrieve that “picture” when you are about to write it.

The Three Types of Memory

When I teach spelling to children and to adults, I first talk about the three types of memory. The first type of memory can be called “Blackboard” memory, which lasts from 1-30 seconds. The goal of your brain in Blackboard memory, surprisingly, is to forget what you’ve seen. For example, if you’re driving down the street and see various business signs, “Tom’s Bakery,” “Joe’s Key Shop”, “Chan’s Dry Cleaners,” etc., you certainly don’t want to keep remembering Joe’s Key Shop for the rest of the day. Rather, a “slide” of Joe’s Key Shop is stored in your visual memory, but you’ve made no pathway to consciously retrieve the memory. Occasionally there may be an accompanying smell (such as the bakery next to the key shop) which may remind you of the key shop, but you’ll most likely not remember that the key shop exists. So, when you actually need a key made, you’ll probably have to search the listings for one, and lo and behold, there’s Joe and his key shop right around the corner!

The second type of memory can be called Short-Term Memory, which lasts from 31 seconds to about 2-3 months. Most children rely on Short-Term Memory to recall information for tests, midterms, and final exams, but then forget the information the following year (which explains why kids have to be re-taught “mean, median, and mode” every year from elementary to high school). The third type of memory, Long-Term Memory, is the stored memories of experiences and information that we will always be able to recall, either from connection to an emotional event (e.g., World Trade Center) or from multiple uses (e.g., names, phone numbers, addresses, etc.).

The goal of all learning, then, is to place what needs to be remembered into the student’s Short-Term Memory, so that facts, dates, and the spelling of words can be recalled. Once this information is stored in Short-Term Memory, a pathway is established so that the student is able to consciously retrieve the information for up to 3 months. If there is repeated exposure to the information, this pathway becomes even more established, forming a Long-Term Memory.

Simple Technique for Perfect Spelling

Teaching spelling in school is usually done by having a student copy the words over and over again, which of course does not work at all. By copying the words, their spelling never leaves the student’s Blackboard Memory, so the brain does its job well and dutifully helps the student forget the spelling. The goal, then, is to place the spelling of the word in the student’s Short-Term Memory, so it’s “picture” can be retrieved.

Here is a simple technique that you can do at home to help your child succeed in spelling:

1.  Have your child write the spelling word on a piece of paper, then trace the letters with his or her index finger while saying the spelling word out loud. Have the child say the word normally while tracing it, not say or sound out individual letters or vowels.

2.  Take the paper away and wait a minimum of 30 seconds (e.g., sing the “Jeopardy!” theme or some other song).

3.  Give your child a blank paper, saying, “Now, write the word you traced.”

4.  If your child spells the word incorrectly – which is likely to occur at the beginning of this technique – go back and repeat steps 1-3.

Once your child has established a pathway to the Short-Term Memory of a word’s spelling, it’s THERE – the brain has no way of knowing if that pathway was established 31 seconds ago, one week ago, or one month ago. And since the pathway is there, your child WILL remember the spelling of the word.

I’ve used this technique with parents and children for many years, even students with mild traumatic brain injury, and I’ve never come across a student who did not suddenly go from the worst speller to the best speller in the class.

Good luck!………………..Dr. David.

 

Learn more about the New PRIDE Reading Program

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David Raffle, PhD, CBIS, is a credentialed special education teacher, educational specialist, and brain injury specialist who performs neuropsychological and psychoeducational testing for special education services, standardized testing accommodations, and modifications in the workplace for children, adolescents, and adults with developmental disabilities, traumatic and acquired brain injuries, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, and autism spectrum disorders.

Visit Dr. Raffle’s website at: https://www.DavidRafflePhD.com or email him at: davidrafflephd@gmail.com

 

Who is the Best Reading Tutor in Beverly Hills?

Who is the Best Reading Tutor in Beverly Hills?

Beverly Hills has very accelerated and academic programs in their schools.  The kids that go to school in Beverly Hills often need extra assistance and extra outside help.  According to a survey from The National Center for Family Literacy, at least 50 percent of parents turn to tutoring because they feel they cannot help their children.  When a child struggles in reading, they often fall behind.  If a child  has difficulties in reading and comprehension, chances are a specialized reading tutor in Beverly Hills will be necessary.  So…. which tutor does a parent choose and who is the best reading tutor in Beverly Hills?

 

Multisensory Teaching Experience

Children with reading, writing and comprehension difficulties learn best with a specific type of instruction.  They will need a multisensory structured language program based on an approach called the Orton-Gillingham.  Orton-Gillingham tutors are available at PRIDE Learning Center in Beverly Hills.  The tutors at PRIDE Learning Center have teaching credentials with strong special education backgrounds.  The tutors are all experienced and certified Orton-Gillingham specialists and are trained in a multisensory approach.

 

Orton-Gillingham Teaching Experience

It takes very specific skills to teach students to read and comprehend.  A tutor with these skills call themselves Reading Specialists or Educational Therapists.  There are no regulations about who can or can’t use these titles, so it is important to check on which methodology for teaching reading and comprehension they use.  It is best to use a specialized reading tutor in Beverly HIlls that is trained in teaching students in the Orton-Gillingham methodology.  This is by far the very best and most effective option for struggling readers.  The reading tutors at PRIDE Learning Center are all Orton-Gillingham trained.

 

One-On-One Teaching Experience

Most struggling readers need one-on-one help so that they can move forward at their own pace.  In addition, these students often need a great deal of structured practice and immediate, corrective feedback to develop automatic word recognition skills.  The reading tutors at PRIDE Learning Center are available and  open for one-on-one lessons at least 4 hours a week.

 

So…..who is the BEST????

The best reading tutor in Beverly Hills is PRIDE Learning Center because they use:

  • The right program (Orton-Gillingham Program)
  • The right tutor (someone trained in Orton-Gillingham and multisensory teaching)
  • The right intensity (at least 4 hours a week)
  • The right setting (one-on-one)

For more information on PRIDE Learning Center’s reading, writing and comprehension tutoring program call 866-774-3342 today.

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karina richland

Karina Richland is the Founder of PRIDE Learning Centers, LLC.  Ms. Richland is a certified reading and learning disability specialist.   Ms. Richland speaks frequently to parents, teachers, and professionals on learning differences, and writes for several journals and publications.

You can reach her by email at karina@pridelearningcenter.com or visit the PRIDE Learning Center website at: www.pridelearningcenter.com

Join us for an Open House!

Join us for an Open House!

You are invited to an Open House at

PRIDE Learning Center in Mission Viejo!

Friday, November 13th

10:00 – 2:00pm

27001 La Paz Road, Suite 354

Mission Viejo, CA 92691

PRIDE Learning Center provides high quality reading, writing and comprehension services for students with Learning Differences.  We are the Orton-Gillingham specialists in Orange County and Los Angeles.

This summer we will have multiple summer seasonal locations in: Newport Beach, San Diego, Yorba Linda, Redondo Beach, Beverly Hills and Sherman Oaks.

Come meet our staff, see our education center, and learn more about the services and programs we offer.  Snacks, drinks, and raffles for kids and adults!

We look forward to meeting with you!

 

For more information email us at info@pridelearningcenter.com or give us a call at 866-774-3342

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