Agree. I work at a community college. There are *so* many reasons for people to be behind, especially in math and reading but also in just general knowledge of things like history and science.... So many different ways I'm not even goin' there :P We have a reading and math assessment, and the people who do poorly on it are sent to me. I have some resources for getting skills up -- we used to have ixl.com and... Source: 5 months ago
I don't have a subscription. I just clicked through a couple of examples on ixl.com. I have no idea if they limit the number of problems you can work. Source: about 1 year ago
As far as resources, many have been shared here but I would highly recommend looking at Professor Leonard's YouTube channel. He has full lecture videos in playlists ranging from Prealgebra all the way to upper level undergraduate mathematics. For practicing these skills I would suggest Deltamath.com or ixl.com both are good resources. Try to setup a deltamath educator account, not sure if it's possible without... Source: over 1 year ago
There are many, many free resources out there and the correct curriculum for your children will probably be a blend of everything (because, hey, they are unique.) It you want to get a little idea of what topics by grade level then look at ixl.com. But again, learn from the site and not pay for it unless you truly believe that's what you need. Otherwise, you can just take the topics and look up free resources. Source: over 1 year ago
You can look through ixl.com math section by grade level to see what skills your son should obtain by grade. But at the same time, respect his learning ability is this subject and move at his pace. Source: over 1 year ago
Ixl.com Practice, more practice, and then more practice. Also, Down and Dirty Grammar with Grammar Girl Mignon Fogarty is pretty great, too - web and books. Source: over 2 years ago
Sign up for ixl.com. Excellent way to identify your weak spots and build them up. Source: over 2 years ago
I started re-learning math about four years ago, also in my late 20s, to meet requirements for entering a STEM program. I don't think it's too hard to learn at this age. Khan Academy felt like it took much more time than was necessary, and I used ixl.com to grind out hundreds and hundreds of problems. However, it has a monthly fee associated with it, like $9 for the math curriculum. Source: about 3 years ago
The site gets their own website URL log in so we can push that out to all devices. The only issues we've had are with teachers who forget to click the link on their shortcut and try to go to ixl.com and log in. Source: about 3 years ago
Ixl.com is good if you are applying a more structured environment to their early learning education. Source: about 3 years ago
Ixl.com Active recall (I'll explain this to you in a bit) or testing yourself is actually one of the most effective ways of learning. IXL is perfect for this as it is question-based system. It have 4 subjects (as of now): Math, Science, English, Social Science and Spanish. I don't suggest that you use this for science though as it is still incomplete Their syllabus absolutely sucks and I really don't recommend... Source: about 3 years ago
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