COVID-19 Math Tutoring

Transformative Tutoring remains open to help students through this unusual time. Without regular school work, this could be a great opportunity to begin preparing for the SAT or ACT (which are usually taken for practice in the spring of your junior year and then again in the fall of your senior year). We offer private one on one tutoring in person or via FaceTime or Zoom. Check our schedule to make an appointment.

March 17, 2020 – All K-12 schools in FL will remain closed until April 15th. All state FSA testing has been canceled for 2019-2020. All university campuses are closed through the end of the semester and students will do online learning. Schools may be asked to extend the school year to June 30. For seniors trying to qualify for Bright Futures it is not yet clear what accommodations are being made. Read more from the FL Department of Education here.

March 16, 2020 – Presently, the College Board has not changed the AP testing dates. The College Board offers late testing each year and it is likely that the late testing days will become the test days. Read the latest here.

March 16, 2020 – The College Board has announced that the May 2020 SAT has been completely canceled. Keep up to date with the latest SAT news here.

March 15, 2020 – ACT has postponed the April 4th test to June 13th. Read more here.

Our New Storefront for 2019!

Transformative Tutoring in Osprey, FL

We had a wonderful 2018-2019 school year and we are excited to make a difference in the community again this year. We had so many success stories and helped transform so many students last year! We know 2019-2020 will be even more amazing for our families! We recognize that the success of our students not only changed their lives, but changed the dynamics of their families. We received many reports of improved relationships and reduced stress and we are hoping to build on that success in the years to come. If your family is having math problems, come see us and experience the transformation.

Top 10 Questions To Do Together

In my years of teaching and tutoring, I have helped hundreds of students. Some had small problems they needed help with while others were basically starting from scratch. At Transformative Tutoring, we believe that every parent should spend a little time doing math with their child. Sure, your child gets a grade at the end of each year and perhaps has to pass an EOC exam, but what does that all mean?

Understanding Grades and SAT or ACT Scores

The best way to understand what that letter grade or SAT/ACT score means is to spend a little time actually having your child do some math with you. You might be surprised to find out that your teenager, who got just a B in Algebra 2, Precalculus or Calculus, is still adding and subtracting by counting on their fingers. (I would estimate that over 20% of high school students that have completed Algebra 2 still count on their fingers when not allowed to use a calculator.)

Students Are Growing Up in a Cashless, Digital World

Today’s children, in fact all of us, live in a digital age. Most middle class children rarely use coins and bills the way we did when we grew up. We had to know that four quarters made a dollar, but today’s children cannot buy anything with a quarter, so they don’t really care about quarters. Today’s children might have digital currency such as gift cards, debit cards, prepaid cards or iTunes credits, but they rarely handle cash. As a result, they use math for about 45 minutes a day about 180 days a year, exclusively in math class.

Compounding the problem for this digital generation is that calculators can do all their dirty work. In fact, you don’t even have to have a calculator anymore, just ask your smartphone something like, “Hey Siri, what’s 315 divided by 3.875?” As soon as most children find these error-free paths of least resistance they (ab)use them and shut their brains off entirely to the world of math. Before you know it, math doesn’t make any sense to them and they become incapable of thinking mathematically.

Beware of the Tools for Avoiding Math Homework

When a struggling math student hits high school there is often no easy way out and their struggles worsen. Did you know that every answer to every math textbook problem is available online? Most high school kids do! Now, they can breeze through their homework using sites like Slader, which has used crowd-sourcing to categorize every problem and answer, often with full solutions so students can “show their work.” Textbook publishers have tried to stay one step ahead by creating online homework assignments where the problems insert randomized numbers so that no two students get exactly the same question. However, in the great arms race to avoid doing math homework, once again there was a counter-attack in the form of an app called PhotoMath. Simply take a picture of any math problem and it will solve it for you, no thinking required! I have even heard reports of students using this app in their classroom to cheat on tests!

The SAT has a No Calculator Section

Eventually, the day of reckoning for all college bound students arrives, and that is the day of the SAT or ACT. These tests require students to know what they are doing and to actually understand and apply the math skills, formulas, strategies and concepts that they have, or haven’t, been using all of these years. Sadly, the arrival of that first SAT or ACT score is often the first day that a parent actually becomes aware of the magnitude of their child’s struggles with math. Now, they have a big problem on their hands, not much time to fix it and a jam packed schedule. Yes, there were B’s (many teachers require a student to be completely incompetent AND disrespectful to get a C grade these days, so a B should be considered a serious warning sign, especially if your child is well liked by their teachers) along the way that tried to serve as warning signs. Yes, there were some below average PSAT, PSAT 8/9, or EOC scores that tried to be the harbinger of the peril ahead, but these signs often were not obvious enough to raise enough concern to cause someone to take action.

Spend 5 Minutes Doing Math Together

So, today, and for the next few days, I beg you to sit down and spend a few minutes doing these problems with your child and without a calculator (20 of the 58 SAT math questions do not allow a calculator, while all 60 of the ACT math questions do allow a calculator) and see with your own eyes if your child needs help with arithmetic, Algebra 1, Geometry or Algebra 2.

Win $100 and Free Tutoring

100 Dollar Eraser Contest

Transformative Tutoring will be at the Family Living’s Summer Camp Fair at Nathan Benderson Park on Saturday, March 30, 2019 from 10 AM until 2 PM. Register online for free admission to the Camp Fair or visit the tutoring studio for a free ticket or two.

Our summer camp schedule for 2019 is as follows:

  • June 10-14 & 17-21 – Intro to Computer Programming in C# – 9 AM – Noon – This is a two week camp.
  • June 10-14 – Middle School Math Competitions – 1 PM – 4 PM
  • August 5-9 – Preparing for Success in Calculus – 9:30 AM – 11:30 AM
  • August 5-9 – SAT Math Review 600+ – 12:30 PM – 3:00 PM
  • August 5-9 – SAT Math Review Below 600 – 4 PM – 6:30 PM

Pricing and registration for all camps will be available online soon. Please use the Contact Us page to express immediate interest. All camps have a maximum of 6 students.

Visit our booth to enter your guess at the number of erasers in our giant jar of erasers for your chance to win $100 and 2 free hours of tutoring. The person with the closest guess will be announced via an email to all participants and a Facebook post. If there are multiple entries with the closest guess then a random number will be chosen to determine the winner. Online entries are not permitted. You must visit our booth at the Camp Fair to enter.

Preparing for Success on Test Day

One Week Before Test Day

  • Start reviewing & reworking past mistakes as you lead up to test day. So, go back through all of your practice tests and find any questions you missed and make sure you can do them with ease. If you find any that still are awkward, then make a list of which test #, section # & question # and we can review them in the final week before you crush this test. Keep up the great work. Your extra effort in this final week can really make an enormous difference. You’ve got this! Finish strong!
  • Buy some peppermint gum. Peppermint helps with concentration.

Thursday

Friday

  • Find an old school watch if you want to bring one on Saturday. Advanced watches such as the Apple Watch are NOT permitted.
  • Pack your backpack:
    • Bring your registration confirmation information.
    • Bring your picture ID.
    • Find your calculator.
      • Make sure your calculator has lots of battery life.
      • Make sure your calculator is in degree mode. If you don’t know what that means, then it won’t matter what mode you are in.
    • Sharpen your trusty handful of #2 pencils.
    • Pack your peppermint gum.
    • Pack a snack or two.
    • Prepare your water bottle.
  • Review my full SAT study guide.
  • Do another practice test or two. I recommend section 3, test 8.
  • Pick out your favorite outfit. Do you have something you wear that makes you feel awesome, powerful, smart and/or relaxed? Wear it on test day to improve your mood.
  • Set your alarm early enough to have a quality breakfast and arrive to the testing center early. You don’t want to be nervously standing at the end of a long line.
  • Go to bed at your normal time or a little bit earlier.

Saturday

At home

Arriving at your test site

  • Arrive early.
  • Leave your phone in the car. Phones can only get you in trouble inside the testing center. They are NOT allowed during breaks.
  • Have your picture ID and registration form ready.
  • Start chewing that peppermint gum.
  • Use the restroom one last time.

During the Test

  • Do the less difficult non-multiple choice problems first. 80% are easy!! Do the hard ones later. Do these easy problems first. They’re a nice warm-up.
  • If you have to guess on a non-multiple choice problem, guess “2”.
  • Quickly decide if a question is easy (1), medium (2) or difficult (3). You probably don’t want to invest much time on difficult questions. 90-95% of the questions are 1’s and 2’s. Stick to the 1’s and 2’s and you’ll do great. Battle the 3’s and you’ll get bogged down and potentially lose confidence. You can always do the 3’s last if you have time. Spending 5 minutes on a problem 95% of people will get wrong is a terrible use of valuable time.
  • Always pick the most likely answer before going to the next question. That’s your best guess and you’ll have to use it if you run out of time.
  • Put a question mark next to answers you are not certain of. You can review these questions as you fill in all the bubbles near the end of the test.
  • Write “+” next to questions you are certain are answered correctly.
  • To save time, bubble in all of your answers for each page once you have completed the page. That is faster than going one question at a time.
  • Review my test problem solving strategies in my full SAT study guide.

After the Test

  • Go unwind. Do something fun and relaxing.
  • Drop me a quick note to let me know how it went.

We Are Growing!

We have added seven new students since January 1st! In order to better meet the needs of our growing group of students we have purchased a much larger table for the main study area.

To help us tutor more students we have added a large table for our main study area.

We can now comfortably fit six students at the main table. Six is our limit for after school study groups and SAT/ACT test prep. As the schedule gets too busy to accommodate all students for one-on-one sessions, please consider joining a group. They are meant to be convenient and affordable.

If you need a study group at a different time, contact us and we will see if we can gather enough students to start more after school study groups.

Carter finished in 3rd place as an individual in MathCOUNTS in 2019

Congratulations Carter!

Carter McCaa – Individual 3rd Place – MathCOUNTS Myakka Chapter – February 1st, 2019

Carter finished in 3rd place as an individual in MathCOUNTS in 2019

Carter described the event as extremely nerve racking, but he enjoyed it. He’s not used to doing math problems under so much pressure! He had lots of stories to tell and has a lifelong memory now. Students from Pine View finished 1st, 2nd & 3rd! They swept the podium! The team has qualified for the state competition!

Now Open! The Transformation Begins…

Visit us at 151 N. Tamiami Trail, Osprey, FL 34229.

Kennon McCaa has launched Transformative Tutoring, LLC to help students improve their confidence, knowledge, skills, and performance in math. His goal is to create an important and lasting change for his students.

Kennon brings a love of learning and a lifelong passion for helping others through education to Transformative Tutoring that will significantly benefit either you or your student. His joy of teaching and mathematics makes him effective with students of all ages and interests, as evidenced by success stories ranging from 3rd grade to college.

Contact us to get started with your transformation!