‘Why is My Bright Child Struggling in School?’
If the question above is one that keeps you awake at night, your child’s struggles may be a result of dyslexia.
Dyslexia and other language processing disorders cause bright people to struggle. Why?
If the question above is one that keeps you awake at night, your child’s struggles may be a result of dyslexia.
Dyslexia and other language processing disorders cause bright people to struggle. Why?
Seton Catholic School, located in South Lexington, was named a 2012 Blue Ribbon School of Excellence by the U.S. Department of Education.
With only 50 schools selected each year, this honor places Seton in the top 15% of schools in the U.S.
As students move from center to center in Stacy Hoskinson’s first-grade classroom, she can feel the excitement in the room. She can see it in the eyes of her students.
Librarians have played an important role in my life, but none was more special than the first I ever knew.
The winners of the ninth annual – and final – Keep It Real Video/Internet Contest were awarded a total of $3,025 in prize money at an awards program at the Kentucky Theatre.
Keep-It-Real-winnerToo bad filmmaking is only a hobby for Henry Clay High’s Gus Logsdon. He already shows a gift for the art form.
But with a 34 on the ACT, eight AP tests under his belt and applications to Vanderbilt, MIT, Duke, Virginia and Columbia, you can see why engineering is his first choice.
As soon as the crying, desperate student in mid-meltdown saw Cornel Carter in the hall, he flung his arms toward Cardinal Valley Elementary’s Home/School Liaison – the safest of harbors for many boys at school.
Thomas More College in Crestview Hills, Ky., just 10 minutes from downtown Cincinnati, recently celebrated the realization of a long-held dream to build a free-standing chapel.
A new program at Midway College has performances bringing students, staff and community members to their feet with excitement.
The Midway College Artist, Lecture & Convocation Series hosts a variety of guests – photographers, musicians, comedians and athletes.
Sixteen-year-old Emily Smith of Paris had always thought of herself as a “bad test taker.”
The homeschooled high school sophomore would study before a test until she thought she knew the material.