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IB Global Academy Really suitable for you to prepare IB Mathematics Home Tutorfor IB Math HL Tutor IB SL Math Tutor, IB Math studies, IB MYP Maths Tutor for Math A/AS levels Maths. Looking For the Best Maths Tutor in India? If you are looking for a private IB Maths Home Tutor, IB tuition in India to better understand the excellent points of the Maths, you can easily seek help from our very experienced Maths Tutor. IB Mathematics Home Tutor, we are an excellent and result oriented IB Home tutoring service provider. We help to coordinate access of expert Tutor to Parents and Students all over Gurgaon, Noida and also in Delhi NCR. You can get the best pool of tutoring resources, Tutoring Facilities and Worksheet Modules based on past exam papers to help your child experience a happy schooling. We have over 8 years in Maths (HL, SL, SL-Studies) in-house experience, in helping students achieve their potential and help them score better.<br><br><br>So, one of the best things to do is to research tutoring fees in your local area. Many local school districts will have community education services that may point you towards tutoring services, or have Spanish language classes taught by experienced tutors. Use the phone book, check out newspaper ads, and search online for other tutors. Once you have done your homework, you will have a good idea of what the going rates are for tutors in your area. Expect some to charge by the hour, and expect others to provide half-hour rates as well. This will give you the answer to whether or not you can afford to hire one. A key thing is to remember that tutors often welcome negotiations for fees if you show that you are truly interested in their services.<br><br><br>If your budget simply does not agree with a tutor, then you may wish to consider other options. But, remember that a tutor is tailored to your individual needs, and a course of study is not. Although it takes time to get to know a person, there are some key things to remember when interviewing a Spanish tutor. You want to find the one that is truly right for you. First impressions will tell you if your personalities seem to mesh. Spend time speaking with the tutor. Be certain that you can understand the tutor, whether speaking in English (or your native language) or Spanish.<br><br><br>You will want someone who can understand you, too. And, you will want someone who can give clear guidance during your lessons. Some people are more fluent in speaking than in writing or listening. If your goal is conversation, then fluent speaking will be important. But, if your goal is business understanding, then learning how to read and write will be an important additional goal for your tutoring sessions. And, if you happen to be looking for your child, make certain to bring your child to the interview and see how your child interacts with the tutor. Children are great observers of adults, and they often know on the spot whether they get along with someone or not!<br><br><br>You will quickly see if your Spanish tutor gets along well with your child, and the same kind of comfortable interactions must take place between the two of you! If you cannot find a good fit for a tutor, then you may want to consider an online course as an alternative. Or, you may wish to find a good Spanish class in your area. Finally, you will need a tutor until your specific goal for the tutor is reached. You will want to think about setting goals so that your goal can be reached within your budget. If your budget is limited, or if you are going on a trip soon and need your language skills soon, then think about asking your tutor to focus on a vocabulary group that you will need the most. Food and basic conversation is good for a vacation, while numbers and business terms will be important for a business trip. You can then ask the tutor to tailor basic sentences around your vocabulary group. Do you really need a tutor? The answer to the question all depends on your budget, your personal needs, and your learning timeline. Try the useful guidelines suggested above as one way to find the answer to your question. Whatever you decide, then follow it up with lots of practice!<br><br><br>If you're interested in learning Spanish, then there's no better time to do it than now. You can learn it online for free easily, but you do need to apply constant effort into your learning sessions and you need to be motivated. If you aren't, then you're probably going to give up online for free quickly. Unlike going to a Spanish class, you must organize your time by yourself and make sure you get effective Spanish lessons by yourself. Doing it online for free isn't the easiest way to learn it, simply because free resources won't be of very good quality. Ever heard of the expression: "Nothing is for free"? This applies to the Internet too. Free Spanish learning courses online won't be as good as the paid ones.<br><br><br>There still are very good free Spanish resources out there that are pretty easy to find on Google. When I first started learning the language, I did my research online on many free Spanish learning ways and on paid courses. I landed up purchasing a Spanish course called Rocket Spanish. It wasn't too expensive, but I told myself that it's better to learn Spanish the right way instead of wasting my time with online free Spanish learning resources that wouldn't get me very far. Should you be cheap with yourself when you want to invest in yourself? Learning a new language is one of the best things you can do for yourself.<br><br><br>Not only will you be more knowledgeable, you'll also be able to meet many more people and learn about many more cultures. Also, by setting yourself a goal on learning Spanish and then realizing it, you'll have more confidence in yourself and you'll be able to be a better person - a more outgoing person. Learning a new language can drastically change your life for the better, and I truly don't suggest being cheap about it and trying to learn Spanish online free. Just think of how much you'll get once you know how to speak Spanish. Rocket Spanish, the course I learnt with, has proved to be very effective for me. I'd love it if you would listen to my experience on learning Spanish with Rocket Spanish. I'll tell you what helped me when I was learning and I'll also talk to you about Rocket Spanish to see if it is right for you.<br><br><br>If you mean slang as it is spoken in Spain, try Amazon Books, If you mean Spanglish, hang around Hispanic people. Here in the US, we have a mix of Spanish and English merged and it's not all slang . Just English interspersed with Spanish words. Where can you learn Spanish easy? There are many websites that will help you learn Spanish. Just 'Google' Spanish lessons. You can download free English/Spanish dictionaries, language lessons and even a verb conjugator to help you learn Spanish. Or, you can do what I did, find a group of Spanish-speaking people you can trust to teach you their language properly and just jump in and submerge yourself in their language and culture.<br><br><br>What are methods to learn how to speak Spanish? Rocket Spanish is the best book available in the market to learn Spanish. You can learn Spanish online, free and within 2 months with rocket Spanish. I myself used rocket Spanish to learn Spanish. How can a person learn Spanish quick and free? A website that you could Learn Spanish For Free? How can you learn Chinese for free? There are a lot of free materials that you can use, such as the Chinese learning websites, apps, and videos. Are there any free Spanish learning websites out there? Duolingo and Memrise. I recommend duolingo.<br><br><br>Where can one get a free translation of English to Spanish? If someone wishes to get a free translation of English to Spanish there are a variety of different websites where one can do so. Ia Romanian a language if so where can you learn it for free online? Yes, Romanian is a language. It is one of the Romance languages, and you can learn it for free online at several different websites. Do a search for "learn Romanian free online," and quite a few results will turn up. What websites can you go to for free to learn how to play the guitar? Do i have to learn spanish and you no English?<br><br><br>Are there any websites to learn lessons on school without paying? Yes, there are many websites to learn lessons that are similar to those taught in schools that are free. You can access the K12 program in the United States for free, if you are a student enrolled in a public school. You can find free worksheets and projects for learning online at places like Math Blaster and Jump Start. Where can one find websites where people are learning Spanish online? Lots of companies offer Spanish online learning including Spanicity, Spanish Dict and Rocket Languages. These websites all have the additional benefit of being free so there is no outlay if one decides the language is not for them. What are some sites you can get on that teaches you spanish for free?<br><br><br>If you are learning Spanish, it's difficult to learn a language only from a computer program or only from a text. Where can one learn to create a website for free? There are a number of places where one can learn to create a website for free. There are instructional books found at most local libraries. There are also a number of online tutorials to be found, on websites such as eHow and About. What websites can you learn to speak fluent Portuguese on for free? Livemocha is a very good school online. Search for it through Google. How do you say beans in spanish? Where can one learn about SEO reports? There are many websites that explain about SEO reports such as Wikipedia, Bing, and MSDN.<br><br><br>One can also get free SEO reports at websites such as SEO and High Conversion SEO. Where can a zombie learn to make free websites? As zombies are not real, they are note able to make a free website. If someone was looking for information on a free zombie website then one can visit the website Human vs Zombies. A good website to learn a new language? There are many good websites for learning a language. But it depends on what language you want to learn? Its all in kind of ways like this. I would like to learn say spanish. Here are the questions you want to ask yourself first.<br><br><br>What do i speak? How will this effect me? Where will i use this. And who will i talk to in it. Im american. Im learning tons of difrent language. How you can learn accounting the easy way? Answer: There are several websites that offer free aniline training material. For example click on the related links below. What does 'casino gratis' translate to in English? The phrase casino gratis is a Spanish phrase that translates to free casino. This is a term that would be used in many of the Spanish online gambling websites. What are some free ppv websites? Where can you go to translate Spanish words to English words for free?<br><br><br>Its all free and it really does work. You write to them in Spanish and they write to you in English and you correct each other through onsite emails at your leisure. What are the best sites to learn French? What is the best software for learning spanish? The best software to learn Spanish will be the one that suits the way you like to learn. As they all have different methods I would recommend you take advantage of the Free trials or lessons that most of the online providers provide. You can view some videos on Youtube. There are also some websites such as Free-Tarot-Reading, Learn Tarot, Angel Paths, and Goddess Flight. There aren't too many free guides, because most people expect you to pay to learn how to read them. What are some of the free resources that I can use to improve my Spoken English?<br><br><br>Where can one learn how to create their own logo? There are quite a few websites where one can design and create one's own logo for free. FreeLogoServices and LogoGarden are two such websites. They offer demos and samples for one to see how it works. What is the best way to learn Spanish on the web? The best way to learn a language on line is to chat one on one with a native speaker. There are a few websites out there that allow you to chat through Skype. Cafespeak allows you to chat with either a native speaker or a tutor in your native language. They also offer a free trial. I would just keep using the free trial, and take advantage of that.<br><br><br>Which telecom companies are there in France? Some telecom companies in France include 3Roam, DartyBox and Free Mobile. You can learn more about these telecom companies at their respective websites. What websites feature free clip art pictures? You can get free clip art pictures online from websites such as the OpenClipart Organization and Classroom Clipart websites. You can also get free clipart from the Free-Clipart Net website. Where can you find a free download of Spanish learning material? Why do free websites want you to pay to use them? Free websites don't want you to pay to use them. What websites are free to advertise on?<br><br><br>You can try FreeAdvertisingForum, ViewMemo. Inetgiant. These are 3 free advertising websites. What is the English translation of 'Pagina Web'? Pagina Web is a Spanish word which translates to web page in English. The translation of Spanish words can be found on line through the use of several free translation websites. Where can one learn how to speak English? English can be either learned locally, by going to a local teacher and buying classes, or online, for free. Online solutions include dozens of free websites, though their quality varies. Where can one learn to write some simple php scripts? There are various websites which offer tutorials on simple PHP scripts.<br><br><br>Both the Elated, and the Free Webmaster Help websites offer many tutorials to help with PHP scripting. How can you get free squishies? You can get them for free on trash websites. What websites offer a free translator from French to English? There are many websites that offer a free French to English translator. Some examples of these websites include Google, Free Translation, Reverso, and Gengo. What are some free fun websites to go on? If you mean some fun, free music websites, than freeplaymusic. If you mean gaming websites, then addictinggames. View the websites below for the links. Where can you get a stock quote?<br><br><br>You can go to a certified stock broker to give you a stock quote with information on where to go OR you can visit different websites to get a FREE stock quote and learn on the net. Where could you learn the programming language Cplusplus on the internet for free? Please see the related links for some sites. What is the difference between free websites paid websites and limited acces websites? Free Websites are websites which gives all their contents for reading/re-write freely. Paid Websites are websites which offers their services for a fixed paid amount. Limited Access Websites are websites which give a small portion of their content for free and if you need still more information in depth, then you need to pay some amount prescribed by them.<br><br><br>Are there any online therapy chat websites that are actually completely free? Apparently we are only worth what we can pay . What are some free gambling websites? There are a few free gambling websites around the internet. Some of these free sites include 'Free Casino Games', 'Sportsbook', 'Free Bets' and 'GoneGambling'. Which websites allow one to have free live chat? There are many websites that allow one to have a free live chat. Some of the websites that allow one to have a free live chat would include Skype and other websites like Justin TV. What websites offer free casino slot games?<br><br><br>There are dozens, if not hundreds, of websites that offer free casino slot games. Facebook has several free casino slot games, as do the websites ClickFun and Games. How does one learn about stock market day trading? Various websites can be used to learn about stock market day trading. One example would be TradingMarkets, which offers free online seminars. Other examples include About, Wikipedia, and Dummies. Tell you some free online virtual websites? Are there any free gay websites without signing up? If you google search "free gay websites" you will find them. What were the most unnecessary movie remakes or reboots ever made? What is the history of Velcro? Who is Halle Bailey? What are the most haunted places in the United States of America? What is the Bottle Cap Challenge? What were the top selling toys of the 1980s? What celebrities avoid social media? Why did the Sonic the Hedgehog movie get delayed? What is it like to be left at the altar? What were the top selling toys of the 1970s?<br><br><br>May 17 (Stateline) - Tens of thousands of asylum-seekers from Central America are spreading out around the United States, straining the resources of local and state governments working to move and shelter them. 4 million in state and local funds to educate them and leaving the district scrambling to find bilingual staff. From 2017 to April of this year, more than 55,000 asylum-seekers from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras arrived in the United States. Almost two-thirds now are in California, Florida, Texas, New York, Virginia and Maryland as they await asylum hearings. But every state has some, including at least three each in Alaska, Montana and North Dakota, according to a Stateline analysis of federal immigration court data.<br><br><br>The escalating arrivals have frustrated the Trump administration, which had promised a more secure border but is now seeing more crossings than at any time during the Obama administration. The administration has tried various tactics without success, from separating families, to limiting the number of asylum-seekers allowed to enter the United States each day, to forcing some to remain in Mexico while waiting for their cases to be resolved. But crossings have continued to rise as, experts say, word spreads that this path to escape violence in Central America may eventually close down completely. Many cities and states began stepping up in October, when federal immigration authorities stopped housing many asylum-seekers.<br><br><br>The "Safe Release" program, as it was called, had temporarily sheltered and fed those seeking asylum, then offered transportation to bus stations or airports to continue their journeys. When that ended, local governments and charities had to fill the void. 1.6 million to provide shelter space, security guards and nurses to screen asylum-seekers for illness. 5 million to fund nonprofits running a shelter at the border for asylum-seekers to stay temporarily while arranging transportation to sponsors. San Diego receives about 60 people a day, and most are young women and children, said Michael Hopkins, CEO of Jewish Family Service of San Diego, one of the local charities running the shelter with the help of state funds.
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The national pastime has been a truly international game in recent years, with a wave of Latin Americans coming to the U.S. — many scrambling to pick up English along the way. Now their American-born teammates and coaches are returning the favor by learning Spanish. Miami Marlins CEO Derek Jeter made news last year with the announcement his club would require its minor league coaches and players to start learning Spanish. Not every team goes that far, but at least half the league’s 30 clubs now offer some level of Spanish lessons for English speakers, says MLB Vice President Paul Mifsud.<br><br><br>"The Marlins’ industry leadership on this is extremely helpful," Mifsud told the Associated Press. Marlins manager Don Mattingly, who like Jeter spent his entire playing career with the New York Yankees, told The Washington Times recently that if learning Spanish helps communication on and off the field, he’s all for it. "I’d heard Derek (Jeter) say once that it never seemed fair that the Spanish kids gotta learn English but the English guys don’t have to learn Spanish," Mattingly said. At the major league level, a confluence of cultures and languages is a standard feature of the clubhouse — but it can also be a hindrance to coaching, Mattingly said.<br><br><br>"Even if they kind of understand it, (a word) may not mean the same thing to them," he said. "We always have interpreters back and forth. So, like a growing number of other American coaches and players, Mattingly puts the onus on himself to pick up more Spanish. He uses the language-learning app Duolingo. Others download Rosetta Stone. That’s how Michael A. Taylor became known around the Washington Nationals clubhouse for his Spanish proficiency. When the Nationals outfielder was in the minor leagues, Taylor would spend hours-long bus rides using the software program to learn Spanish. Spurred on by "not being able to talk to half my team," Taylor learned the language in four months. "I definitely think it helps, especially the younger guys as they kind of learn English," Taylor said.<br><br><br>Still, in a league with 750 players on active rosters and several thousand more in the minors, Taylor is more the exception than the standard. That’s why the Marlins include year-round language lessons as part of the mandatory player development program for all rookie ballplayers. It’s not unlike a high school class — two or three times a week, 30 to 45 minutes at a time in a classroom setting with full-time teachers, interaction with classmates and even homework. Luis Dorante Jr, the Marlins’ translator this season, helped coordinate Spanish lessons in Jupiter, Florida, last year while serving as a player development intern. "Globalization is taking over, shrinking the distance of the world," said Mr. Dorante, who was born and raised in Venezuela and came to the U.S.<br><br><br>The language barrier was creating problems. MLB set a new rule in 2016 requiring each team to have a translator so the sport’s Latin stars could speak more easily with the media. The translators often fill multiple roles: Mr. Dorante also works in player relations and as a Spanish media liaison. Washington’s translator, Octavio Martinez, is the team’s bullpen catcher. The Washington Nationals’ Juan Soto, 20, and Victor Robles, 22, are generally seen as the team’s most exciting and promising young players. Both hail from the Dominican Republic. But when it comes to learning English, they are at very different steps on the journey. Robles, who hasn’t spent as much time at the major league level, needs a translator to speak with most American journalists.<br><br><br>But Soto told USA Today he prided himself on learning English while coming up through the system. Martinez stands by during Soto’s interviews, but the outfielder hardly ever needs his help. Taylor isn’t the only National who can speak to Soto and Robles in Spanish. Adam Eaton said he’s learned a few phrases and spare words in Spanish in order to better connect with his teammates. "If (a teammate is) talking about a famous pianist in Spain, I would never, ever be able to, but in baseball, I can kind of follow along," Eaton said. Eaton tried Rosetta Stone for a few weeks several years ago, but let it fall by the wayside. Now, he says, he wished he learned Spanish in the minors while he had more spare time. "It can only further your career and better your career if you take full advantage of it," Eaton said. "Not everybody has the resources to learn and do it with this much help and as much … experience, so to speak, of learning it. Copyright © 2019 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.<br><br><br>It’s an alternative to expensive private schools, tutors, and camps, thereby addressing a much larger market. Parents increasingly want more than schools can reasonably offer, thanks to a focus on tests and deep budget cuts. Teachers could use extra income to supplement meager salaries, and also an outlet to channel passions that standardized testing have tried to kill. "Too much of K-12 is focused on the end result and we are losing sight of the base purpose," Nathoo says. Megan Hardy was a stay-at-home mom and found Outschool when she was looking for a way to get her son interested in history.<br><br><br>She found the five-dollar course "Big Picture History: American History in One Lesson." Her son loved it. He took a few more classes. When her husband lost his job a year later, Hardy thought about creating a class to teach critical thinking and problem solving through Dungeons and Dragons (which she and her kids play all the time). She applied to Outschool and was interviewed, provided a lesson summary overview, and got approved within three weeks. After clearing a background check and going through on-boarding to learn the Zoom videoconferencing technology, she started teaching, in spite of never having taught before.<br><br><br>Hardy now teaches 40 to 50 hours a week. "It turns out, a lot of kids want to learn this," she says, laughing at the sound of it. 7,000 a month—Outschool takes 30% of teachers’ earnings for marketing, admin, and handling all the billing. Hardy’s classes run for six weeks and are 80 to 90 minutes each. She’s capped each class at six kids, so she can better manage the group. The average class at Outschool is three to eight kids; 18 is the maximum. 10-15 a class. Nathoo estimates that about 80% of kids use it for fun and 20% for core learning. Benjamin Corey, who taught middle- and high-school biology for eight years in Atlanta and San Francisco, says he loves the freedom he has to build interesting classes.<br><br><br>He teaches five to six hours a day, and offers 40 classes. Eleven are core classes, each four sessions long, which make up the equivalent of freshman biology. He also teaches 29 one-off classes, including a series on endangered species that address environmental topics via specific animals (orangutans and deforestation; orcas and biomagnification of pollutants). He misses the interaction of a classroom—shared physical space and body language are key to teaching, he says—but has worked on making the online experience as rich as possible. He caps his classes at nine students and does a lot of diagraming, calls on everyone a lot, and never has a segment go more than 10 minutes.<br><br><br>"I don’t see myself going back to the classroom any time soon, because it would be a pay cut and a lot more stress," he says. Nathoo founded Outschool in 2016, with the idea that social connection was key to learning. "So much of ed-tech today is automated, putting tools or AI in the classroom," he says. It was the social aspect of Outschool that drew Jennifer Carolan, a former public school teacher and founder of Reach Capital, to invest in it. The big failing of MOOCs, where completion rates hover between 5-15%, is to ignore that humans are, at heart, social learners.<br><br><br>"We learn from each other and teachers can be very impactful," she says. Outschool matches curious learners to teachers who teach. "There’s a teacher who is passionate about the subject matter, and a small group of learners, and the tech that can enable social interactions between kids," she says. The biggest challenge was how to get started: parents won’t sign up without classes and teachers won’t teach classes without students. The company’s first iteration was in-person learning: Nathoo organized field trips in San Francisco for kids to go to museums with teachers and some learning goals in mind. Parents joined their kids and saw how they got more out of a visit when a teacher was there.<br><br><br>Carolan loved the idea, but didn’t think it could scale. When Nathoo pivoted to online, with small, live classes, she jumped in. As due diligence, she signed her daughter up for a class, watched, and was impressed. She vetted the team who vets the teachers, and ultimately invested two weeks later. The challenge now is to attract teachers and students beyond the home-schooling community, aiming for kids who log on after school, in the summer, and during holidays. It might not be easy to gain traction beyond this community, namely for those parents uncomfortable with their kids taking classes from non-certified teachers.

Latest revision as of 11:52, 16 July 2019

The national pastime has been a truly international game in recent years, with a wave of Latin Americans coming to the U.S. — many scrambling to pick up English along the way. Now their American-born teammates and coaches are returning the favor by learning Spanish. Miami Marlins CEO Derek Jeter made news last year with the announcement his club would require its minor league coaches and players to start learning Spanish. Not every team goes that far, but at least half the league’s 30 clubs now offer some level of Spanish lessons for English speakers, says MLB Vice President Paul Mifsud.


"The Marlins’ industry leadership on this is extremely helpful," Mifsud told the Associated Press. Marlins manager Don Mattingly, who like Jeter spent his entire playing career with the New York Yankees, told The Washington Times recently that if learning Spanish helps communication on and off the field, he’s all for it. "I’d heard Derek (Jeter) say once that it never seemed fair that the Spanish kids gotta learn English but the English guys don’t have to learn Spanish," Mattingly said. At the major league level, a confluence of cultures and languages is a standard feature of the clubhouse — but it can also be a hindrance to coaching, Mattingly said.


"Even if they kind of understand it, (a word) may not mean the same thing to them," he said. "We always have interpreters back and forth. So, like a growing number of other American coaches and players, Mattingly puts the onus on himself to pick up more Spanish. He uses the language-learning app Duolingo. Others download Rosetta Stone. That’s how Michael A. Taylor became known around the Washington Nationals clubhouse for his Spanish proficiency. When the Nationals outfielder was in the minor leagues, Taylor would spend hours-long bus rides using the software program to learn Spanish. Spurred on by "not being able to talk to half my team," Taylor learned the language in four months. "I definitely think it helps, especially the younger guys as they kind of learn English," Taylor said.


Still, in a league with 750 players on active rosters and several thousand more in the minors, Taylor is more the exception than the standard. That’s why the Marlins include year-round language lessons as part of the mandatory player development program for all rookie ballplayers. It’s not unlike a high school class — two or three times a week, 30 to 45 minutes at a time in a classroom setting with full-time teachers, interaction with classmates and even homework. Luis Dorante Jr, the Marlins’ translator this season, helped coordinate Spanish lessons in Jupiter, Florida, last year while serving as a player development intern. "Globalization is taking over, shrinking the distance of the world," said Mr. Dorante, who was born and raised in Venezuela and came to the U.S.


The language barrier was creating problems. MLB set a new rule in 2016 requiring each team to have a translator so the sport’s Latin stars could speak more easily with the media. The translators often fill multiple roles: Mr. Dorante also works in player relations and as a Spanish media liaison. Washington’s translator, Octavio Martinez, is the team’s bullpen catcher. The Washington Nationals’ Juan Soto, 20, and Victor Robles, 22, are generally seen as the team’s most exciting and promising young players. Both hail from the Dominican Republic. But when it comes to learning English, they are at very different steps on the journey. Robles, who hasn’t spent as much time at the major league level, needs a translator to speak with most American journalists.


But Soto told USA Today he prided himself on learning English while coming up through the system. Martinez stands by during Soto’s interviews, but the outfielder hardly ever needs his help. Taylor isn’t the only National who can speak to Soto and Robles in Spanish. Adam Eaton said he’s learned a few phrases and spare words in Spanish in order to better connect with his teammates. "If (a teammate is) talking about a famous pianist in Spain, I would never, ever be able to, but in baseball, I can kind of follow along," Eaton said. Eaton tried Rosetta Stone for a few weeks several years ago, but let it fall by the wayside. Now, he says, he wished he learned Spanish in the minors while he had more spare time. "It can only further your career and better your career if you take full advantage of it," Eaton said. "Not everybody has the resources to learn and do it with this much help and as much … experience, so to speak, of learning it. Copyright © 2019 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.


It’s an alternative to expensive private schools, tutors, and camps, thereby addressing a much larger market. Parents increasingly want more than schools can reasonably offer, thanks to a focus on tests and deep budget cuts. Teachers could use extra income to supplement meager salaries, and also an outlet to channel passions that standardized testing have tried to kill. "Too much of K-12 is focused on the end result and we are losing sight of the base purpose," Nathoo says. Megan Hardy was a stay-at-home mom and found Outschool when she was looking for a way to get her son interested in history.


She found the five-dollar course "Big Picture History: American History in One Lesson." Her son loved it. He took a few more classes. When her husband lost his job a year later, Hardy thought about creating a class to teach critical thinking and problem solving through Dungeons and Dragons (which she and her kids play all the time). She applied to Outschool and was interviewed, provided a lesson summary overview, and got approved within three weeks. After clearing a background check and going through on-boarding to learn the Zoom videoconferencing technology, she started teaching, in spite of never having taught before.


Hardy now teaches 40 to 50 hours a week. "It turns out, a lot of kids want to learn this," she says, laughing at the sound of it. 7,000 a month—Outschool takes 30% of teachers’ earnings for marketing, admin, and handling all the billing. Hardy’s classes run for six weeks and are 80 to 90 minutes each. She’s capped each class at six kids, so she can better manage the group. The average class at Outschool is three to eight kids; 18 is the maximum. 10-15 a class. Nathoo estimates that about 80% of kids use it for fun and 20% for core learning. Benjamin Corey, who taught middle- and high-school biology for eight years in Atlanta and San Francisco, says he loves the freedom he has to build interesting classes.


He teaches five to six hours a day, and offers 40 classes. Eleven are core classes, each four sessions long, which make up the equivalent of freshman biology. He also teaches 29 one-off classes, including a series on endangered species that address environmental topics via specific animals (orangutans and deforestation; orcas and biomagnification of pollutants). He misses the interaction of a classroom—shared physical space and body language are key to teaching, he says—but has worked on making the online experience as rich as possible. He caps his classes at nine students and does a lot of diagraming, calls on everyone a lot, and never has a segment go more than 10 minutes.


"I don’t see myself going back to the classroom any time soon, because it would be a pay cut and a lot more stress," he says. Nathoo founded Outschool in 2016, with the idea that social connection was key to learning. "So much of ed-tech today is automated, putting tools or AI in the classroom," he says. It was the social aspect of Outschool that drew Jennifer Carolan, a former public school teacher and founder of Reach Capital, to invest in it. The big failing of MOOCs, where completion rates hover between 5-15%, is to ignore that humans are, at heart, social learners.


"We learn from each other and teachers can be very impactful," she says. Outschool matches curious learners to teachers who teach. "There’s a teacher who is passionate about the subject matter, and a small group of learners, and the tech that can enable social interactions between kids," she says. The biggest challenge was how to get started: parents won’t sign up without classes and teachers won’t teach classes without students. The company’s first iteration was in-person learning: Nathoo organized field trips in San Francisco for kids to go to museums with teachers and some learning goals in mind. Parents joined their kids and saw how they got more out of a visit when a teacher was there.


Carolan loved the idea, but didn’t think it could scale. When Nathoo pivoted to online, with small, live classes, she jumped in. As due diligence, she signed her daughter up for a class, watched, and was impressed. She vetted the team who vets the teachers, and ultimately invested two weeks later. The challenge now is to attract teachers and students beyond the home-schooling community, aiming for kids who log on after school, in the summer, and during holidays. It might not be easy to gain traction beyond this community, namely for those parents uncomfortable with their kids taking classes from non-certified teachers.