Necessary Materials
必备材料
  1. Lesson worksheet:

    download and print all the Worksheets for Foundation A or B at one time, or individually.

  2. Pencils and 6" ruler:

    two sharp pencils and one grading pencil (red or blue)

  3. Paper:

    wide-rule, loose-leaf notebook paper; spiral notebooks are NOT advised

  4. Desk or table:

    Don’t work on the floor or in your lap

  5. Computer with online connection

  6. Headphones:

    strongly advised, to focus listening and lessen distraction

How to Begin the Program
如何开始网络课程

Click on the Lesson 1 icon after purchase. It's that easy!

All necessary instructions about how to proceed from that point forward will be provided in the video by the teacher.

Remember to PAUSE the program when time is needed to complete instructions.

Sign out when you have finished; sign in when you wish to begin a new session.

Working with the Time-Clock
计时学习

Specifically timed access is allowed for Foundation A and Foundation B

Foundation A:

  • 12 hours of access is provided to complete the 8 hours of instruction

Foundation B:

  • 20 hours of access is provided to complete the 14.5 hours of instruction

PAUSE the program whenever you need extra time to keep up with the teacher's instructions.

Also PAUSE the program whenever you must interrupt your work; however, if left running, the program timer will shut off at the end of whatever Lesson is being viewed.

Each time you sign in to the site and begin watching a video Lesson, the timer will continue counting, until you have finished Foundation A or B, or until the timer has maxed out.

Time remaining on your counter from Foundation A will NOT transfer to Foundation B.

Why and How This Curriculum Works

网课能怎样帮助学生

The Samuelson Edu online curriculum trains cognitive skills through engaged educational activity. Students are led by the teacher’s voice and the teacher’s real-time work on the video screen to participate fully in the learning process through synchronized thought, action and feeling (aesthetics). The resulting whole-brain, dual hemisphere learning creates, through repetition, a stable cognitive platform upon which ever-more sophisticated skills-learning can occur.

Put more simply: a baby crawls before it walks. Walking is possible because crawling has already integrated movement, sight, and desire to reach what is seen. When this learning network is strengthened sufficiently through repeated crawling, a child walks naturally; in fact, he or she can’t be stopped from walking, as parents well know!

In education, likewise, growth of each new physical or mental skill depends upon solid ground beneath it; in other words, one doesn’t build on sand or wet cement!

For example, a successful sports team results from numerous skills, individually mastered, functioning supportively. A well-written essay likewise reflects a broad range of cognitive and language skills that must first be strong, and then can be used effectively to shape a piece of writing. Similar examples of a sequential learning process are obvious in math and science.

Today, education over-emphasizes, and even trains exclusively for, results, test scores, or “winning,” at the expense of the traditional patient training of individual skills (the results of this over-emphasis are most devastating in the language arts, because so many—practically all—cognitive skills are involved in language).

It’s as if the waving of a wand, or in our case the clicking of a mouse on an answer, or “strategies” to guess right answers, were enough to produce learning. One might learn random facts in this manner, but one cannot learn and stabilize cognitive skills this way.

Common sense and tradition tell us that only a patient and painstaking process of identifying individual parts, and understanding how they work individually and together, can lead to the stable, integrated outcomes, or “results,” we seek.

The Samuelson Edu curriculum strives to assist in this worthy process.