Archive for Activate Your GED Learning
February 25, 2010 @ 11:32 am
· Filed under Activate Your GED Learning, Benefits of a GED, Can I Pass the GED?, Common Questions & Answers, GED Preparation
In a September 2009 report, the Community Service Society notes that 1,000,00 New York adults, one in five workers, lack a high school diploma or GED. The state ranks 48th in the US in GED pass rate, and only 60% of test-takers pass the GED. Compare this to Iowa, where in 2001, 95% of test-takers passed the GED. Iowa’s statistics show that the GED is doable. GED test takers can pass. So, why do people fail the GED? Why does a state like New York have such low pass rates?
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January 27, 2010 @ 12:56 pm
· Filed under Activate Your GED Learning, Finding Time to Study, GED Academy Students, GED Preparation, GED Stories
The 2007 dropout rate in the U.S. was 8.7%. In 1980, that number was 14%. Though the high school dropout rate has declined, each year, millions of adult Americans join the 39 million others left behind, without a high school diploma or GED. There are many reasons why adults go back to earn a GED: better jobs, higher education. However, one of the big, often unmentioned, motivators for adults to get a GED is family.
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December 23, 2009 @ 8:39 am
· Filed under Activate Your GED Learning, Benefits of a GED, Common Questions & Answers, GED in the workplace
In America, 39 million adults don’t have a high school diploma. As employers demand more education from their workers, jobs get harder to find for adult Americans with no high school diploma or GED. Still, many adults think that high school is behind them. They’ve already dropped out. One way or another, they’re getting by. Why should they go to the trouble to study and get a GED? Here are a few reasons why a GED can help any adult with no high school diploma.
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December 2, 2009 @ 11:30 am
· Filed under Activate Your GED Learning, GED Preparation, GED Study Tips
Many adults who begin studying for the GED had difficulty in high school and fell behind in learning skills. That means the GED seems harder than it needs to. The good news is that learning skills can be easy to improve.
One learning skill that can help you study so that you learn faster and better is taking notes. Taking notes can help you stay focused on what you’re studying, help you actively think about what you’re learning, and give you study materials to review later. Have you ever thought about how you take notes, though? What will help you learn and remember easiest? Here are some tips.
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November 25, 2009 @ 11:24 am
· Filed under Activate Your GED Learning, GED Myths, GED Preparation
Studying for the GED exam can seem difficult. After all, most people who left school had some problems learning in traditional classrooms. But the ways that students have traditionally been expected to learn in school aren’t always the best. By understanding how your brain learns best, you can make your own studying more effective.
Learning for the GED is a self-driven activity, so GED learners need to take charge of their learning. Often, the only type of learning that a GED student is familiar with is classroom learning, involving a lot of memorization of facts and dates and run by a teacher who directs what everyone should do. Studying on your own is different and more effective.
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November 10, 2009 @ 10:07 am
· Filed under Activate Your GED Learning, Benefits of a GED, GED Academy Students
There is no short-cut to better jobs and higher education. For the 39 million American adults without high school diplomas, it can be frustrating to find that opportunities are closed to them. Pam Graves had experienced this frustration first hand.
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July 28, 2008 @ 12:55 pm
· Filed under About passGED, Activate Your GED Learning, GED Preparation
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The demand for adult education is growing, with 39 million American adults lacking a high school diploma. Innovative GED experts at the GED Academy have identified four crucial elements to success for adult education GED students.
As the number of adult Americans without a high school diploma nears 40 million, adult education is becoming a critical issue in the United States. GED education programs are sponsored by communities, non-profit organizations, and school districts across the country. “Teaching undereducated adults is extremely challenging,” states Michael Ormsby, president of The GED Academy. “Most adults who didn’t graduate high school never learned good study habits, never felt motivated to learn, never did well in a traditional classroom environment.”
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April 25, 2006 @ 4:25 pm
· Filed under Activate Your GED Learning
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By Leonard Williams
Most GED students are busy adults. Whether they’re enrolled in a local GED prep class, or managing a self-guided study program, limited time means study time should be as effective as possible.
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