Tutoring company helps students, parents âthriveâ in distance learning
Itâs important to Samantha McKeon that learning is fun for her students.
âI feel that students have a tendency that when theyâre bored with learning, that when it becomes boring or seen as a chore, they end up not loving school,â McKeon said. âI want them to love school, so I try to implement games activities into everything I do. When I go to a studentâs house, I usually have a big cart full of things I can use to tailor to meet the needs that theyâre needing.â
For McKeon, who owns and operates Thrive, a tutoring and education company based out of her home in Mission Viejo, tutoring wasnât just students bringing the material to her.
She said she creates lesson plans and content on what she wants to work on with her students, in part using games such as Uno, Candyland or Twister to educate. Her company focuses on grades kindergarten through sixth.
She said she used to work in preschools, but that she saw students struggling to transition between preschool and kindergarten. Thatâs when McKeon decided to start Thrive last year to help bridge the gap between the freedom of preschool to the comparatively rigid schedule of kindergarten. Her passion, McKeon said, was the development of the whole child and how to support both the child and parents.
While her mission hasnât changed, the way sheâs doing so has since the stay-at-home order was put in place last month.
As the state called for closures of all nonessential businesses, schools followed suit with local districts shuttered through the rest of the school year. With students shifting to distance learning and parents working from home, McKeon said that Thrive has been working to continue supporting students, but also to help provide aid to parents through daily check-ins.
âWeâre still working through it. Iâve been doing one-on-one tutoring through [a] PowerPoint and Zoom, but ... all over social media, youâre seeing parents say, âI canât do this. I canât work and be a teacher all at once,ââ McKeon said. âThe one-on-one tutoring is to help support [them].â
McKeon said that she has begun to do check-ins with her students, setting schedules and helping them with classwork where she can keep up her typical regimen of instruction. Sheâs been instructing primarily through Zoom and PowerPoints and retaining a usual routine such as reading a story to her students and having them read to her.
âI feel the biggest challenge for parents are ... theyâre trying to focus on being a business person, parent and [their] home life and theyâre juggling all these different things,â she added. âAnd then also, their children are trying to understand the technology, and now, theyâre entirely online.â
For Costa Mesa resident Megan Miller, Thrive has been helping keep her first-grade daughter occupied while she and her husband work. She said she heard about the program through a neighbor.
âSheâs a little young for first grade, so it was kind of just more interactive to keep her busy. She goes through the whole lesson and has things there for them to do,â Miller said. âEven now, weâre doing Zoom calls with her teachers, but itâs 24 kids. She just needs a little bit more individual attention regardless, and now, itâs more like I seriously need [that individual attention].â
She said McKeon sits down with her daughter through a Zoom call for an hour. For that hour, where her daughter is busy, that is time that they can work, and as a bonus, her daughter is still learning, she said.
She said she felt that her daughter and sonâs teachers were doing the best they could, but that she felt the shift to distance learning has been overwhelming. While her children still get on Zoom calls and have lists of assignments, Miller said she doesnât necessarily have time to help with those assignments.
âEven being able to ⌠give [assignments] to [McKeon], itâs just that hour that you need, you know?â Miller said. âI think teachers are doing what they can. Ours is super organized. I feel lucky because I know some people are struggling and I feel for people whose kids are really behind.â
Nichole Rosa, a Dana Point parent who works at Laguna Beach High School as a counselor, said she started using Thrive to prepare her then-preschooler for kindergarten.
âIâve had to balance working from home as a counselor and teaching my child, home-schooling him and my husbandâs also a math teacher at Dana Hills High School. Heâs got his teaching that he needs to do online,â Rosa said. âI think [Thriveâs] pretty helpful for parents who canât find the time to home-school or donât want to do all of the home-schooling for their own kids.â
Rosa said that she and her husband have been âdividing and conqueringâ at home, with her taking care of the baby and her husband handling her son. Two of her friends work full-time jobs and have had to let schooling fall to the wayside because they donât have time, Rosa said.
âI think thatâs been the biggest challenge is figuring that balance out and communicating to each other when we take shifts on who is watching the kids,â she added. âThereâs a lot of parents who donât have that.â
Miller and Rosa agreed that having Thrive has been useful, largely just because children donât always want to listen to their parents.
Rosa said that she does a lot of college counseling, adding that it often saves parents and students from arguments.
â[Children] donât want to listen to their parents. No kid wants to have their parent be their teacher,â she said. âWhen [teachers are] someone other than you, [children] tend to listen more. I think that would be a pretty good reason. My husband and I are both in education. We understand the ins and outs of schools and how it works. I canât imagine some of these parents having to home-school their kids who have corporate jobs.â
âWeâre together all of the time, so theyâre struggling, too, and itâs hard to remember that,â Miller said. âItâs nice to have somebody thatâs not frustrated.â
Rosa agrees.
âEveryoneâs trying to build the plane while flying in the air. Thereâs a lot of parents here who are super overwhelmed,â she said. âThe teachers are pushing out these materials ⌠itâs cohesive and one program. You donât have to switch and go ⌠she does it all for you instead of having to toggle through multiple online platforms.â
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