Reading for Advanced Placement (AP) and Honors classes
Seattle, WA
Subject: Reading
“I wish I had taken this course as a freshman – it would have changed the entire course of my undergraduate career.” - Khadysha Reinhardt, University of Washington Honors and Comparative History of Ideas senior
We teach students to read and think at the college level. We love our work, and do a good job of it.
In the past we’ve taught students individually, but we’ve recently had great success teaching this material to a small class of students at the University of Washington in the Comparative History of Ideas program. Now we’d like to translate our class to the high-school...
“I wish I had taken this course as a freshman – it would have changed the entire course of my undergraduate career.” - Khadysha Reinhardt, University of Washington Honors and Comparative History of Ideas senior
We teach students to read and think at the college level. We love our work, and do a good job of it.
In the past we’ve taught students individually, but we’ve recently had great success teaching this material to a small class of students at the University of Washington in the Comparative History of Ideas program. Now we’d like to translate our class to the high-school level.
It’s no secret that students can’t read at the level teachers and professors expect of them. Students are expected to carefully read copious amounts of dense material, and routinely fail, resigning themselves to SparkNotes and lowered test grades.
But this should be expected – students don’t read well because they’re not taught to. Schools, even good schools, ordinarily teach students to passively absorb information from texts, and read everything at the same rate.
In contrast, our course trains students to –
- speed read easy material
- slow down on dense, important text
- understand what a book really is, and why it’s of utmost importance
- exploit a textbook’s layout to comprehend it quickly
- take intelligent and useful notes
- get fascinated, and stay fascinated by the text
- pre-read to save time and increase comprehension
- attack a book, quickly finding its thesis and structure
- learn the best books to read about different topics
- read multiple books against one another to write a term paper
- build a massive vocabulary with minimal fuss
- use the Internet for all it’s worth
- read SAT and ACT passages confidently and get questions right
We also train students to slice through complex prose to boil down the essential meaning. For example, we show students how to start with this sentence:
“In working toward such an expansion of the conceptual envelope in which, one can, of course, move in a great many directions; and perhaps the most important initial problem is to avoid setting out, like Stephen Leacock’s mounted policeman, in all of them at once.”
and end with these:
“One can move in many directions. The problem is to avoid setting out in all of them at once.”
Throughout all of this, we present reading as part of the intellectual life – the probing, engaged mindset that attempts to make sense of our place in the world.
Students are given a copy of Mortimer Alder’s How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading, a workbook, and a blank commonplace book.
Besides keeping the course affordable, doing the course as a small group allows students to learn from each other’s problems. Homework each week includes coming to class with a problem in school reading: “I fall asleep when I read x,” “I keep re-reading the same material, but can’t keep it in my head,” and the ever-popular “I have to read Of Mice and Men this weekend – what do I do?!” To each, we give helpful advice.
Thus, we’d like to work with a group of 4-8 students. It helps if the students are in classes that demand hard reading, especially honors or AP classes, as the course will revolve around applying what we learn. Students will bring their class books to the lessons and do exercises out of them.
The class is two hours long, meets once a week, and will run 8 weeks. Though it’s a large time commitment, we’re confident that the time saved in reading will more than make up for it.
To make this class financially make sense for us – we also work as test-prep coaches – we need to make about $100 per class, which works out to $25/person with four students or $12.50/class with eight.
We’re also happy to work with college students and adults.
Please contact us with questions at the address above, addressing letters to Brandon and Kristin. You can also learn more about who we are and what we do (including full resumes) at our website, seattleSATcoaching.com
When
Contact teacher to schedule a time and date
Ages
15 to 18 year olds
Where
Willing to travel up to 10 miles
Type
- 1:1 / Private Lessons,
- Class / Group Sessions
Skill level
Advanced
The teachers
-
- Taught By
- Seattle SAT Coaching
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I love coaching students.
You'd think test-prep would be the dullest career imaginable -- indeed, we who teach...
I love coaching students.
You'd think test-prep would be the dullest career imaginable -- indeed, we who teach it are often relegated to the lowest rung on the educational ladder: the scum-sucking bottom feeders of the teaching pond. And, frankly, sometimes this characterization is spot-on! Test-prep is usually dull, routine, and soulless; the antithesis to everything good education strives to be.
(I do things a little differently.)
After graduating from Arizona State, I discovered that I had a gift for teaching. Working at a tutoring center in Scottsdale, Arizona, I found myself being specially requested by students from preschool to college. I often excelled with the angry, disaffected teens that other tutors shied away from. The center's director asked me to be the exclusive tutor of his 7th grade son. My joy was treating students as mature adults, engaging them at the highest possible intellectual level.
After working there, I took on a number of wonderful odd-jobs: teaching existentialism to middle schoolers, entrancing bored high schoolers with Native American religious cosmology, and confronting kindergarteners with the radical, and sometimes bizarre, morality of the Jewish and Christian traditions.
My ultimate goal is to become a classroom teacher -- to be a phenomenal humanities instructor at a private school or homeschooling co-op. I want to teach history, philosophy, earth science, sociology, world religions, art, literature, and math, though not necessarily in that order!
While I prepare to do that, though, I coach students.
It's a delight.
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