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Training Workhops and Seminars
Want to be a better, more knowledgeable and creative teacher? Attend
a UTW Training Workshop, or get the most out of the Sail Away Language
Arts Learning System by attending workshops with Sail Away's creator,
Brenda Murphy.
One Good Sentence
Synergy of Reading
Sail Away Language Arts Learning System Workshops
Get the most out of the Sail Away Language Arts Learning System by attending Sail Away to Success Language Arts Workshops with Sail Away pioneer, Brenda Murphy.
English is a simple, orderly language and Sail Away workshops prove it to teachers, tutors and parents. Whether instructing preschoolers, teens, or adults, a Sail Away workshop exposes even veteran teachers to crucial language arts information rarely presented in such a concise, but comprehensive, format. Teachers learn to apply Sail Away's systematic approach to teaching language arts skills, including phonemic awareness, phonics, reading decoding, reading comprehension, penmanship, spelling, oral and written composition, listening skills, analogy, and grammar, at any level.
A Sail Away Workshop provides invaluable skill-presentation innovations that can be applied to any curriculum or learning environment. Whether a teacher chooses to use Sail Away materials or not, teachers, especially those with older students who struggle with spelling and reading, can adapt Sail Away style instructional strategies into any educational situation. Meet some teachers and parents who have done just that at a Sail Away Workshop .
Sail Away Workshops can come to your school or organization. They easily adapt to meet the special needs of any group.
2007 Sail Away Workshop Schedule
Kansas City Area
June 14-16
Contact: Dee Young (913) 269-1632 or Deb Callow (816) 767-0492
Vista, California
June 19-21
Contact: Ingrid Thomson (760) 802-8652 or (706) 940-1739
Knoxville, Tennessee
August 1-3
Contact: Alison Claudy or Mary Pennington (865) 376-7005
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"This program is so simple and makes so much sense. It also answers so many questions that developed while using (another) program." --L. Irwin
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