02/16/2026
https://www.facebook.com/share/r/18Z5CdjVrq/?mibextid=wwXIfr
CCT opened in 2011 to connect students with certified teachers providing below, on and above grade level support!
Using the Georgia PreK- 12 Standards as our guide, we work with a collection of Best Practices to build confidence and skill sets! Classic City Tutoring was created to continue to serving the Athens community with superior tutoring, for students from 4-years of age to high school and beyond. We use the Georgia Performance Standards (GPS) to guide our programs, while supplementing all grade level work with Best Practices.
02/16/2026
This.
https://www.facebook.com/share/r/18Z5CdjVrq/?mibextid=wwXIfr
02/14/2026
Happy Love Day! Thank you Aardra for allowing me to share your work!
02/12/2026
Families need to make family time a sincere FIRST priority !
https://www.facebook.com/share/r/18DiqPxpop/?mibextid=wwXIfr
02/08/2026
Love seeing my kiddos working hard and feeling happy 🙌🏼🙌🏼!
Indulging children takes away their sense of accomplishment.
Dr. Phil McGraw
I whole- heartedly BELIEVE this!🌟
https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1GFg3AQSFD/?mibextid=wwXIfr
01/26/2026
I have a college friend Cathy Clay who lives in Monroe, GA, an elementary school teacher who did this for her boys and it worked. Food changes us. It changes our children.
01/11/2026
Great read on how Kindergarten used to be structured! Our children today need this more than ever🌟!!!
https://www.facebook.com/share/1Bz4ukt1by/?mibextid=wwXIfr
In kindergartens across America during the 1950s, a beautiful thing happened every afternoon.
After the alphabet songs. After the crayons were tucked away. After graham crackers and small cartons of milk.
The lights would dim.
A record would begin to spin.
Soft music would fill the room.
And twenty small children would settle onto striped mats, pull up their familiar blankets, and learn something remarkable:
How to be still.
Naptime wasn't considered wasted time. Teachers understood that young minds needed rest—not as a reward, but as part of learning itself. Science has since confirmed what those educators already sensed: daytime napping is crucial for memory consolidation in young children. Their developing brains actually need these pauses to process and store everything they're absorbing.
Some children slept deeply. Others simply lay still, watching dust float through afternoon sunlight, daydreaming in that unhurried way only five-year-olds can.
Even the children who never slept learned something profound: that stillness has value. That you don't always need to be doing something to be worthy.
Then, beginning in the 1970s and accelerating through the 1990s, something shifted.
Kindergarten transformed from a place of socialization and gentle curiosity into something more urgent. Standards rose. Testing crept younger. Academic pressure intensified.
The mats were rolled up and stored away. The record players disappeared.
By the 1990s, naptime had largely vanished from American kindergarten classrooms.
Today, kindergarteners move from reading groups to math centers to screens, often without a single moment to simply pause. Research shows that the time spent on reading and math instruction has increased dramatically, while music, art, and child-selected activities have declined significantly.
Meanwhile, childhood anxiety has risen sharply. Studies show anxiety in children increased 27 percent between 2016 and 2019 alone.
We removed the pause, then wondered why children struggled to breathe.
Those who lived through the naptime era still remember: the feel of that familiar blanket, the kindness of being told it was okay—expected, even—to rest.
We didn't realize we were learning a lesson that would take a lifetime to understand: Rest isn't the opposite of productivity. It's what makes productivity possible.
To every parent watching their exhausted kindergartener: they weren't always asked to go this hard, this young.
To every teacher fighting to protect moments of play and stillness: science has always been on your side.
To anyone who feels guilty for needing to pause: we used to teach five-year-olds that stopping was part of growing.
We once dimmed the lights, put on a record, and gave small children permission to simply be.
Maybe it's time we remembered how.
09/12/2022
Let us help your child work hard this school year!
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