Would such a course be available through the school you teach in?
No. I have thought of asking one of the Korean teachers who teaches English to tutor me.
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Would such a course be available through the school you teach in?
There are excellent apps you can download (many for free) to learn new languages. My son has done so on his trips - learning French, Spanish & Russian - now working on Italian. A bit squeezed into free moments during the days & evenings adds up quickly!No. I have thought of asking one of the Korean teachers who teaches English to tutor me.
There are excellent apps you can download (many for free) to learn new languages. My son has done so on his trips - learning French, Spanish & Russian - now working on Italian. A bit squeezed into free moments during the days & evenings adds up quickly!
Regarding the behaviour coupon idea
Personally as a parent I don’t think they work. Parents are always trying with kids. But the ones who are more inclined to be good, do well. The ones who are struggling with poor behaviour very quickly fall behind and lose interest
Lastpointe said:It would be helpful to know ages of students.
Lastpointe said:And how the school operates. Is it part of their day school? Is it extracurricular? Is it paid by parents? Free? Mandatory?
Lastpointe said:I think all those play into how to correct behaviour. Plus what is they are doing? Not studying? Talking during lessons? Cheating? Skipping class? Eating at desks?...........
Lastpointe said:I have been learning another language and I definitely can see a level of fatigue set in after an hour or so, just too much going on in my brain so I shut down
I attended a school where basically everything was rewarded or punished. Every kid was in a House - there were four. Housepoints were awarded by the teachers for exceptionally good work, for considerate actions (like holding a door open voluntarily), for improved behaviour etc. Housepoints were removed for the opposite behaviours. A simple record was kept by a couple of students in each class. A monthly tally was posted where everyone could check it.
All the school sports activities were also included with tournaments held for swimming, a softball type game, a basketball type game and the track and field day. What I particularly liked about these was every student was expected to participate for a Housepoint. Not participating brought a penalty of five Housepoints. Housepoints were issued for the top three places in each event. There were suitable events for those who weren't skilled - such as blowing a ping pong ball across the shallow end of the pool. slow bike race, three legged race - and they earned points just like the more athletic activities. The House that gave out the most enthusiastic cheering on was also given Housepoints.
Towards the end of the school year all the Housepoints were added up and a big silver cup was awarded to the winning House during the annual Awards Day.
I think it worked fairly well.
I attended a school where basically everything was rewarded or punished. Every kid was in a House - there were four. Housepoints were awarded by the teachers for exceptionally good work, for considerate actions (like holding a door open voluntarily), for improved behaviour etc. Housepoints were removed for the opposite behaviours. A simple record was kept by a couple of students in each class. A monthly tally was posted where everyone could check it.
All the school sports activities were also included with tournaments held for swimming, a softball type game, a basketball type game and the track and field day. What I particularly liked about these was every student was expected to participate for a Housepoint. Not participating brought a penalty of five Housepoints. Housepoints were issued for the top three places in each event. There were suitable events for those who weren't skilled - such as blowing a ping pong ball across the shallow end of the pool. slow bike race, three legged race - and they earned points just like the more athletic activities. The House that gave out the most enthusiastic cheering on was also given Housepoints.
Towards the end of the school year all the Housepoints were added up and a big silver cup was awarded to the winning House during the annual Awards Day.
I think it worked fairly well.
That sounds like Hogwarts to me.I attended a school where basically everything was rewarded or punished. Every kid was in a House - there were four. Housepoints were awarded by the teachers for exceptionally good work, for considerate actions (like holding a door open voluntarily), for improved behaviour etc. Housepoints were removed for the opposite behaviours. A simple record was kept by a couple of students in each class. A monthly tally was posted where everyone could check it.
All the school sports activities were also included with tournaments held for swimming, a softball type game, a basketball type game and the track and field day. What I particularly liked about these was every student was expected to participate for a Housepoint. Not participating brought a penalty of five Housepoints. Housepoints were issued for the top three places in each event. There were suitable events for those who weren't skilled - such as blowing a ping pong ball across the shallow end of the pool. slow bike race, three legged race - and they earned points just like the more athletic activities. The House that gave out the most enthusiastic cheering on was also given Housepoints.
Towards the end of the school year all the Housepoints were added up and a big silver cup was awarded to the winning House during the annual Awards Day.
I think it worked fairly well.
That sounds like Hogwarts to me.
what age are the students you teach jae & what is the usual class size? how many classes do you see in a day?Not the same thing, I know, but my classes carry house names. My classroom is Yale - so I gave the classes house names based on the Yale residential colleges.
what age are the students you teach jae & what is the usual class size? how many classes do you see in a day?