I got a newsletter in my inbox this morning from our friends at Positive Parenting Solutions. They always have great advice and tips so I wanted to share this great ‘back to school’ helper! Hope you find useful!
By the age of 5, most children in America will take some kind of intelligence test!
Whether your child is going to a private school or public school, a gifted program or a regular classroom, the most important test she will take comes years before the SAT.
Join us for a FREE special training event from The Testing Mom, Karen Quinn, who’s own son was headed for special education until she cracked the code of early intelligence testing and boosted his score from the 37th to the 94th percentile.

Learn how to take charge of your child’s intellectual development, and set him up to ace tests and thrive in school.
In this FREE 1-hour teleseminar, parents of children ages 2 to 9 will learn:
- The 7-abilities every child needs for school success and how you can build each one at home in the course of everyday life,
- The 5 most effective ways to raise your child’s IQ,
- How to impact your child’s IQ by 38 points (and other IQ surprises)!
- How to prepare for testing without stressing you or your child out.
WHEN: Tuesday, August 23 – 9-10 PM EST / 6-7 PM PST
PLUS FREE – everyone attending will get 50 practice questions to try with their child! See how your child handles typical “test” questions!
RSVP today!
KAREN QUINN has been a featured expert on school admissions on ABC’s 20/20 and The View and in the New York Times, Forbes, Redbook, Woman’s Day, and more. She is the author of Testing For Kindergarten (along with four other novels, including The Ivy Chronicles), creator of IQ Fun Park, and co-founder of www.TestingMom.com.




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My son has LD and I fought the system to get him into a school equipped to teach him the right skills so he could succeed in life.
One of the biggest mistakes most parents make is leaving it up entirely to the education system to educate their child. No responsibility right? If the child fails, the parents have someone to blame.
You need to be proactive and take a serious role in your child's education. You need to be there, tutoring, helping with homework, explaining things.
It’s also accepted as medical fact that breast-feeding is a child’s first immunization. How does this not count as a health benefit?