
North Avenue Education
News, Insights, & Study Tips
Back-to-School Tips: How Personalized Tutoring Can Ease the Transition
Working one-on-one with someone experienced and knowledgeable is a great way to help students get through these challenging times. Parents who connect their students with personal tutoring have set them up for success
5 Benefits of 1-on-1 Tutoring for Academic Performance
Learn how you can enhance your understanding, develop better study habits, and achieve academic success through the attention, guidance, and personalization offered by 1-on-1 tutoring.
Strategies to Tackle Exam Anxiety to Stay Calm and Focused
Conquer exam anxiety and gain insights for a stress-free approach to exams and academic success with these proven tips.
10 Tips for Boosting Academic Wellbeing & Mental Health
Mental health is the engine that drives your focus, effort, and energy. Without practices and habits to promote mental health, you become overwhelmed by the stressors of school and other commitments, eventually burning out.
How to Study More Efficiently & Effectively
You may be pleased to learn that there are research-based strategies for studying for exams. When implemented, these study strategies will yield better results and ensure your time investment in studying is more effective and efficient.
How to Balance Studying, Work, & Self-Care During Finals Week
You’ve made it to college! The orientation is complete, the first semester is wrapping up and the weeks are inching closer and closer towards finals week. Suddenly, you have multiple exams (some on the same day) and you are in multi-hour-long study sessions. You are tired, hungry, exhausted and stressed – and there is laundry to do, a room to clean, and a shift at work to show up to. How do you do it all without burning out?
Study Habits You'll Need to Succeed in College
Learn how to stay organized, prioritize tasks, get high scores, and effectively manage your time with our top 5 study tips so you can succeed in college.
How to Study for a Language Final
The turn of the new year is an exciting time. Holiday break provides a perfect and necessary opportunity to relax, unwind, and begin the new year with refreshed energy and motivation. Nevertheless, many schools’ schedules coincide so that early into the new year midterm, or even final exams, loom. Although you may still have a couple weeks before these exams are upon you, it’s critical to begin the studying process now in order to fully retain the substantial amount of material that you’ll be tested on. You don’t want to find yourself at the end of break realizing you have barely reviewed.
Tips to Maximize Productivity Over Your Holiday Break
Holiday breaks can be the perfect time to reflect and reassess – what aided success this last semester, and what hindered performance? Here are a few key tips to deepen your understanding of your (or your student’s) academic journey.
How to Leverage Your Homework Profile
Too often homework emphasizes the wrong aspects of learning, like rote memorization and mechanical intake, and not what matters most about learning: process, experimentation, and iterative improvement. But what happens if we think of homework as process? Homework becomes an opportunity to cultivate study skills that help us become motivated, self-directed learners.
Essential Study Skills: Preparing for a New Semester
The beginning of the year is a great time to reflect, reassess – what worked, or didn’t? – and plan for the new academic year. While it’s infeasible to plan for every contingency, it is helpful to install a few keystone strategies in place to effectively focus, manage time, and study well.
Essential Study Skills: Close Reading of Literary Texts
Being able to closely read a text is a skill that will serve you in high school, college, and beyond. It’s also one of the hardest abilities to master. In this post, we will explore what close reading is and how to improve your expertise.
Supporting Students with Dyscalculia
Students with dyscalculia have a significantly more difficult time learning math than most, in this post we will explore how to identify dyscalculia and what we as educators and parents can do to help.
Study Tips for a Productive Second Semester
Concerns within and about our contemporary educational systems have been voiced for years. The United States has consistently ranked last amongst OECD countries tested on math gains and second-to-last on literacy gains.
Overcoming Math Anxiety
Many students believe they are simply “bad at math” – and that this will always be true for them. However, such convictions may stem from math anxiety, which causes feelings of extreme nervousness or fear when confronted with math questions or new math topics. Math-related anxiety makes it harder to focus on topics as they are being taught, or while completing assessments. While common, there are also many ways to alleviate math anxiety.
Proven Strategies to Motivate Students
When students are empowered to utilize their intrinsic motivators, rather than passively responding to extrinsic motivators, they become better life-long learners.
What Does a Study Skills Tutor Do?
Study Skills and Executive Function Coaching utilizes educational psychology and practical skill development to help students become better learners.
What Does an Executive Function Coach do?
“Executive function” has been percolating in education circles for a while, having first emerged from neuropsychological research in the 1970s (e.g., Barkley, et al.) focused on the pre-frontal cortex. It has since morphed into a term with myriad meanings and uses, often tied to early childhood development. In this article, we’ll break down what executive functioning is, then examine what an executive function coach does. Let’s start with what executive functioning is.
Strengthening Foundational Math Skills Over Summer
The past school year has been more difficult than most. With the stress and uncertainty of the Covid-19 pandemic, and the consequent hasty switch to distance learning, you might feel that you or your student’s math education has been negatively impacted.
Study Skills for College Readiness
While you definitely deserve a relaxing summer break, now is also a critical time to strengthen your college readiness skills and ensure a successful first semester of college. With a majority of the last year of school happening virtually, the Class of 2021 may have missed out on opportunities to develop important college readiness skills.
Making the Most of Required Summer Reading
Summer is finally here, which for most students means spending days by the pool, going on hikes, hanging out with friends, and maybe taking a drive out to the coast. For many students, it also means the beginning of something potentially anxiety-inducing and demanding: summer reading. Back in the good old days of elementary and middle school, summer reading meant spending a lot of time with Captain Underpants or Diary of a Wimpy Kid. You might still be logging some hours with those classics as a high school student, but you probably have some other classics on your plate now, too (Jane Eyre, anybody?). Not to worry! Summer reading is definitely not something you should dread.
What Study Skills Are and Why Your Student Needs Them
All students can benefit from stronger study habits – especially after an unusual year of distance learning. We’re here to explain how study skills and executive function coaching can help your student reach their potential.
What Can Parents Do to Make Distance Learning Easier?
Even with the prospect of a return to the live classroom on the horizon, many students are continuing distance learning into 2021. These strategies can help your student get the most out of this season.
Studying Smart, Part 3: Interleaving
No one enjoys spending hours practicing the same skill over and over. By diversifying your study routine and interchanging multiple skills, you can learn more effectively.