February News & Updates
Happy Valentine's Month! This February we want to share our love of math with you, and we encourage you to share your love of math with your kids! At Mathnasium, we make math fun for our students, so they look forward to coming into our centers. Our program focuses on teaching math in a way that makes sense to each of our students, giving them the skills they need to reach their math goals, and giving them renewed confidence in themselves.

This month, we hope we can inspire your student to love math as much as we do! Come on into the center for a visit. 
We know math doesn't only happen in a classroom or a math learning program. When parents encourage kids to do math at home on a regular basis, the same way they encourage children to read on a daily basis, those kids are more likely to report that they enjoy math, and feel more comfortable when new math concepts are brought up by their math teachers.

Check out our fun, Valentine-themed math activities to print out at home and do with your student, ranging from lower elementary to post-algebra and everything in between.

Click here to see the blog post and print the activities.
Taking the SAT or ACT is a rite of passage that most aspiring collegians dread. At the end of her junior year, Chris John’s eldest child Emma, took her first SAT, hoping to apply to her first-choice college, Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio.

The test result was a bit of a shocker, and not in a good way.

“Her math score was in the 300s somewhere,” Johns said. “By first semester senior year, we were applying to a few colleges and realized that her SAT wasn’t going to cut it.”

Click here to read how Mathnasium helped Emma double her SAT score AND get a scholarship to her first choice school!
As CEO of an education marketing agency, Charlene Blohm has a great way with words. After all, to engage in marketing, you have to tell stories about your clients to their customers and other audiences. You also have to know how to read the numbers when it comes to key success indicators.

“My goal is to help people succeed,” Blohm said. “I think numbers can talk. I really believe that, because there's so much that you can see inside of them.”

Read the full post here.