Dale Perkins - Learning Detective

Dale Perkins - Learning Detective I provide assessment, remediation, and tutoring for students who are experiencing academic difficulties. Please call for an initial consultation at no cost.

Services include:


Assessment and Remediation of Specific Learning Disabilities
(Reading, Writing, Math, Learning Effectiveness), Diagnostic Teaching, and consultation. Assessments can include:

• Academic skill levels, including sub skill acquisition
• Information processing skills (auditory, visual, motor, sensory- integration)
• Learning style strengths and weaknesses, & effective learning strategies
• Cognitive Abilities- strengths, weaknesses

Remediation entails building academic skills from the bottom up, using one’s personal
learning style, ameliorating deficits, & use of adaptive equipment (as appropriate). Diagnostic Teaching: Analyze skills while simultaneously building academic proficiency. Background:
• Masters in Learning Disabilities through the Department of Neurology at Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco, in conjunction with the University of the Pacific.
• 32 years teaching and consultation in Special Education and regular education in Mendocino County.
• Additional trainings include: Slingerland multi-sensory techniques, Lindamood-Bell Techniques (Visualizing/Verbalizing, Auditory Discrimination in Depth), Making Math Real, Touch Math , Neurolinguistic- Programming, 2nd language skill acquisition, and Learning and the Brain, etc.
• In private practice since 2010

Sliding Scale available.

12/23/2024

Office opening Jan 4th. Looking for a few good referrals.

12/13/2024

Hi folks. I just signed a one year lease to reopen my office that I closed during Covid. Looking for a few frustrated learners that
could use a boost.
707 964-7905

06/04/2024

One day a man saw a lady stranded on the side of the road, and in the dim light of day he could see she needed help. So he pulled up in front of her Mercedes and got out. His Pinto was still sputtering when he approached her.

Even with the smile on his face, she was worried. No one had stopped to help for the last hour or so. Was he going to hurt her? He didn’t look safe; he looked poor and hungry.

He could see that she was frightened , standing out there in the cold. He knew how she felt. It was that chill which only fear can put in you.

He said, “I’m here to help you, ma’am. Why don’t you wait in the car where it’s warm? By the way, my name is Bryan Anderson.”

Well, all she had was a flat tire, but for an old lady that was bad enough. Bryan crawled under the car looking for a place to put the jack, skinning his knuckles a time or two. Soon he was able to change the tire, but he had to get dirty and his hands hurt.

As he was tightening up the lug nuts, she rolled down the window and began to talk to him. She told him that she was from St. Louis and was only just passing through. She couldn’t thank him enough for coming to her aid.

Bryan just smiled as he closed her trunk. The lady asked how much she owed him. Any amount would have been all right with her. She already imagined all the awful things that could have happened had he not stopped.

Bryan never thought twice about being paid. This was not a job to him. This was helping someone in need and God knows there were plenty who had given him a hand in the past. He had lived his whole life that way, and it never occurred to him to act any other way.

He told her that if she really wanted to pay him back, the next time she saw someone who needed help she could give that person the assistance they needed and Bryan added , “And think of me.”

He waited until she started her car and drove off. It had been a cold and depressing day, but he felt good as he headed for home, disappearing into the twilight.

A few miles down the road the lady saw a small cafe. She went in to grab a bite to eat and take the chill off before she made the last leg of her trip home. It was a dingy looking restaurant. Outside were two old gas pumps. The whole scene was unfamiliar to her.

The waitress came over and brought a clean towel to wipe her wet hair.
She had a sweet smile, one that even being on her feet for the whole day couldn’t erase. The lady noticed the waitress was nearly eight months pregnant, but she never let the strain and aches change her attitude. The old lady wondered how someone who had so little could be so giving to a stranger. Then she remembered Bryan.

After the lady finished her meal she paid with a hundred dollar bill. The waitress quickly went to get change for her but the old lady had slipped right out the door and was gone by the time the waitress came back. The waitress wondered where the lady could be. Then she noticed something written on the napkin.

There were tears in her eyes when she read what the lady wrote: “You don’t owe me anything. I have been there too. Somebody once helped me out, the way I’m helping you. If you really want to pay me back, here is what you do: do not let this chain of love end with you.”

Under the napkin were four more $100 bills.

Well, there were tables to clear, sugar bowls to fill, and people to serve, but the waitress made it through another day. That night when she got home from work and climbed into bed , she was thinking about the money and what the lady had written. How could the lady have known how much she and her husband needed it? With the baby due next month, it was going to be hard.

She knew how worried her husband was, and as he lay sleeping next to her, she gave him a soft kiss and whispered soft and low, “Everything’s going to be all right. I love you, Bryan Anderson.”

Author Unknown

Address

331 E Redwood. Suite F
Fort Bragg, CA
95437

Telephone

+17079647905

Website

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