Come join Jason Ng, Parenting Coach and Founder of Future Smart Families in this complimentary talk to explore your child's multiple intelligences and uncover how you can harness these intelligences to help your child excel in school and in life.
As parents, it is important we learn how to leverage on our child's natural strengths.
Each child has a primary learning style, and can be taught how to study and concentrate capitalizing on that style. Each also has a secondary style which can be use to reinforce initial learning effectively. As there are many varieties of learning styles, uncovering one that your child can most relate to can prove to be of his/her advantage.
Matching educational intervention with the child's learning style enables them to master and store new and difficut information. Thus, they are able to unlock their full potential and perform at their peak consistantly.
Jason Ng, Parenting Coach
Jason Ng is a Parenting Coach and the founder of Future Smart Families . He has more than a decade’s wealth of experience in parent-child relationship management and is highly regarded as an influential speaker and a leading parent coach in Singapore, Malaysia and Hong Kong. Jason is a sought-after child education specialist having led a team of successful education advisors with a Mega Preschool brand in Singapore for 9 years.
Since 2006, Jason has been a Family Life Educator with Families For Tomorrow Services, an MSF - appointed Family Matters @ School service provider which conducts family education programmes at schools and junior colleges.
Jason has also conducted trainings to parents, teachers and students on a wide range of topics including multiple intelligence of our children, character education, maximising our children’s potential, social and emotional learning for teenagers, anger management, transition to primary / secondary school life, work-life balance and many other topics.
Jason was often featured on numerous media channels, including Channel 8, Channel 5, 938LIVE, Capital 958, The Straits Times, Channel News Asia and The Straits Times.