Posts Tagged adult

Children and Learning Disabilities What Parents Need to Know

Learning disability. The two words may bring back memories of fellow students being taken out of your classroom and sent to a special room for a few hours a day or a week. Those words have become a negative label, a stigmatism, for many people. But what is a learning disability and why do some people have them and others don’t? And what does it mean if you or your child is diagnosed with a learning disability?

Learning disabilities have been legally described in educational by-laws and under the Americans with Disabilities Act as “a significant gap between a person’s intelligence and the skills a person has achieved at each age.” The National Institutes of Mental Health (NIMH) define a learning disability or LD as “a disorder that affects people’s ability to either interpret what they see and hear or to link information from different parts of the brain. These limitations can show up in many ways—as specific difficulties with spoken and written language, coordination, self-control, or attention. Such difficulties extend to schoolwork and can impede learning to read or write, or to do math.”

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Continuing a Higher Education Online

When it comes to gaining a higher education, online opportunities are quickly becoming one of the most popular options around. If it’s not the user friendly features of online learning, then it’s the cost effective aspects that appeal to the average working adult. This is the person who is greatly interested in the benefits that come from a higher education, just not the rigid schedules and the pricey tuitions that tend to go with it. The benefits of online learning go beyond time and cost to offer a sense of accomplishment once the new Associate’s, Bachelor’s or Master’s degree is in hand.

With technology consistently changing the shape of the landscape of nearly everything, the history of e-Learning has evolved and continues to evolve into great legitimacy in the world of education. While conventional classrooms still have their place, the virtual classroom is seeing more and more students each year. With the accreditation of online schools offering not only a number of degrees and qualifications, the opportunity for financial aid also makes online venues even more attractive. For some, there is just no beating the practical experience one receives in online degree programs. This is especially true when career advancement hangs in the balance.

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The Value Of Higher Education

n today’s world of technology and science, it is hard to underestimate the value of higher education. But, with the skyrocketing tuition fees, many doubt the necessity of continuing the education beyond high school. People, and especially those from low income households, are afraid of making a wrong carrier decision and end up being unable to pay off the loans received for the education.

Tuition and other fees associated with getting a higher education can be quite substantial. Tuition alone can be as high as $38,000 per year (Landmark College, Prutney, Vt.). And the cost of living, textbooks, supplies has to be added on top of that. This means that getting a college degree can cost as much as $200,000 or more! And that is quite expensive. Of course, not everyone would want to study at Landmark, but still the cost of studying at other private schools is not much lower.

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Teaching English As a Second Language

Bilingual education provides a host of benefits to adults. These benefits go far beyond language earning acquisition. In particular, most bilingual education programs foster community, leadership, confidence, and friendship while simultaneously teaching English. These traits are helpful to and often necessary for effective language learning. In his descriptive anthropology of unregistered immigrants, Chavez (1992) revealed that those groups of friends, family, and neighbors have a significant advantage in helping immigrants to establish a residence and gain employment. The author highlights the rate with which those who want to move north utilize these networks. It provides newcomers to the country with a social network, which is vital to language acquisition.

Chavez states, “when recent migrants join more established immigrants, they are provided with a place to stay and their host often helps them find work” (p. 136). Such networks offer momentous benefits to the migrant workers as well as those whose first language is not English. The programs fill in the demand for a family while simultaneously decreasing the foreboding sense of unknown, which oftentimes leads to despair and depression. Such feelings are relatively common when people are presented with a new environment in which to work, learn, and live. Many immigrants have no ties to their native land. Bilingual education methods can extend adult learners’ circle of friends.

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