
Homework is an important part of your child’s education, and a big factor in a child’s success in school. But, it can certainly be a source of contention between children and their parents. It can also be a shared stressor for both parent and child as they struggle together to solve a problem.
Luckily there is help, and it’s called Homework Hotline, a live call-in show where master teachers help kids with homework problems right on the air. You’ve come to rely on Mountain Lake PBS to provide safe, educational children's programming. Mountain Lake offers another resource to help you and your children succeed with homework and with learning. Teachers from Rochester Dial-A-Teacher and New York City Dial-A-Teacher take calls from students in grades four through 12. Selected calls are sent to Homework Hotline’s studios, where host teachers, who are experts in subjects across the curriculum, are standing by ready to help kids work through their homework assignments live on television. Callers with questions not selected for air, are helped over the phone by Dial-A-Teacher.
In addition to the program, Homework Hotline has its own Web site at homework-hotline.org. There you’ll find a video player where you can search by subject matter segments from the show, two interactive video games, homework help tips, a list of educational links, broadcast schedules, teacher host bios, and plenty of educational and entertaining features.
Homework is an important part of your child’s education, and a big factor in a child’s success in school. But, it can certainly be a source of contention between children and their parents. It can also be a shared stressor for both parent and child as they struggle together to solve a problem.
Luckily there is help, and it’s called Homework Hotline, a live call-in show where master teachers help kids with homework problems right on the air. You’ve come to rely on Mountain Lake PBS to provide safe, educational children's programming. Mountain Lake offers another resource to help you and your children succeed with homework and with learning. Teachers from Rochester Dial-A-Teacher and New York City Dial-A-Teacher take calls from students in grades four through 12. Selected calls are sent to Homework Hotline’s studios, where host teachers, who are experts in subjects across the curriculum, are standing by ready to help kids work through their homework assignments live on television. Callers with questions not selected for air, are helped over the phone by Dial-A-Teacher.
In addition to the program, Homework Hotline has its own Web site at homework-hotline.org. There you’ll find a video player where you can search by subject matter segments from the show, two interactive video games, homework help tips, a list of educational links, broadcast schedules, teacher host bios, and plenty of educational and entertaining features.
