Ultimate Spelling For Education

Ultimate Spelling EDU is the world's most advanced spelling learning system for schools. With Ultimate Spelling, you have your spelling teaching requirements completely under control.

Based on proven science, Ultimate Spelling EDU contains all the features of Ultimate Spelling plus:

It's absolutely essential your students graduate with their spelling educational requirements met. With Ultimate Spelling EDU these spelling requirements are more than met. Students also improve academic performance, are prepared for standardized tests, and improve their confidence.

The next step is to see Ultimate Spelling for yourself. Simply fill out the form and we'll send you a free no obligation trial of the full version of Ultimate Spelling EDU.

The Science

Ultimate Spelling is scientifically designed, and utilizes principles based on decades of research in learning, retention, and psychology. Here is a summary of the theory and research behind Ultimate Spelling's effectiveness.

Craik, F., and Tulving, E. "Depth of processing and the retention of words in episodic memory." Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, Vol 104(3) (1975): 268-294. Print and PDF. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0096-3445.104.3.268

In this seminal study performed at the University of Toronto, Canada, the authors performed a series of tests in which they gave the study participants a sequence of words to learn, with information related to each word as it appeared in order. They discovered that when the information provided stimulated the participant's brain to process the word on a more involved level (referred to as "deep encoding" or "degree of elaboration" in the study), that word was more effectively learned and remembered. With Ultimate Spelling, the user is given a wide range of additional information about each spelling word, including the word's definition - one of the key factors in enhanced memory, according to this study - as well as usage examples, synonyms, and antonyms.

Gelman, B.D., Gruber, M.J., and Ranganath, C. "States of Curiosity Modulate Hippocampus-Dependent Learning via the Dopaminergic Circuit." Neuron, 22 October 2014, 84(2): 486-496. Web. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2014.08.060

Students who are eager to learn are more likely to remember what they have learned, something that the authors of this study demonstrate. They used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to show real-time connections between a person's curiosity about a specific topic, and the production of dopamine, the neurotransmitter associated with pleasure and the brain's reward system. The authors also concluded that a higher level of interest and curiosity in a topic or question leads to better memory and enhanced learning. Including exercises that stimulate curiosity, and providing reward mechanisms as part of the study process, also increases a person's ability to absorb and retain information, as the researchers found. Ultimate Spelling has a text import feature that allows each user to include and incorporate practice material that matches their interests, while learning the spelling of words in those texts. The system also uses several different reward systems to encourage users to continue working towards their defined goals.

Garcia, S.M., Tor, A., and Schiff, T.M. "The Psychology of Competition: A Social Comparison Perspective." Perspectives on Psychological Science, November 2013, 8(6):634-650. Print and web. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1745691613504114

Each person is influenced by a unique set of factors related to their own status and progress towards goals, but is also affected to a greater or lesser degree by the achievements and perceived standards of the people around them. This analysis of past and current studies looks at the way people view and are motivated by individual goals as well as societal achievement (competition). The authors conclude that effective use of motivational strategies must take both into account. This is something that Ultimate Spelling accomplishes by providing each user with the ability to set personal goals, earn reward points, and view their own progress tracking reports, and also to publish all of those results on public social media platforms.

Kivetz, R., Urminsky, O., and Zheng, Y. "The Goal-Gradient Hypothesis Resurrected: Purchase Acceleration, Illusionary Goal Progress, and Customer Retention." Journal of Marketing Research, February 2006, 43(1):39-58. Web. http://dx.doi.org/10.1509/jmkr.43.1.39

In a study focusing on the influence of reward-scheme programs on behavior, the authors found that when people see visible progress towards their goals they are more likely to increase the activity required to reach those goals. The study also confirms that most people are also motivated by receiving rewards for completing specific activities, even if those rewards are not immediately transferable to actual material or monetary benefits. Status points, rewards, and real-time progress tracking are all methods used in Ultimate Spelling to encourage frequent spelling practice by awarding points for the completion of exercises and activities. Because the user can access their progress charts at any time, they will always be able to see how close they are to achieving their personal spelling goals.

Buton, M., Winterbauer, N., and Todd, T. "Relapse processes after the extinction of instrumental learning: Renewal, resurgence, and reacquisition." Behavioural Processes, May 2012, 90(1): 130–141. Print and web. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.beproc.2012.03.004

Instrumental learning, also called "operant conditioning," is a method by which behaviors are learned in connection with a stimulus, a reward, or both. In this research done at the University of Vermont, the authors studied the ways in which the information connected to a specific behavior is retained when the stimulus is removed, and how subsequent repetition or reward reinforces information recall and a resumption of previously learned behaviors. They conclude that there are two primary methods of reinforcing active memory and behavior: by creating a different way to test the subject's memory, and by providing the opportunity for intensive focused repetition of that stimulus-behavior response. These two methods are widely used in the Ultimate Spelling activities and games to create the link between instruction and memory that is so crucial in effective spelling learning on the student's part.

Xue, G., Mei, L., Chen, C., Lu, Z-L., Poldrack, R., Dong, Q. "Spaced Learning Enhances Subsequent Recognition Memory by Reducing Neural Repetition Suppression." Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 2011;23(7):1624-1633. Print and web. http://doi:10.1162/jocn.2010.21532

In this study comparing long-term and short-term memory, the study authors tested the neural activity of participants as they memorized a set of images. Half of the study participants used massed learning techniques, in which each new image was presented multiple times in a row; the other half were given the images in a spaced repetition mode, where the images were shown in alternating order. Although each participant saw each image the same number of times, the people in the spaced-repetition exercise were able to accurately remember more images, and for a longer period of time. Repetition is a key technique in learning spelling, and Ultimate Spelling incorporates spaced repetition in two ways. First, the system uses randomized selection of spelling words from the user's current list to populate the activities and exercises, ensuring an interval between word reviews. Second, the system's Word Discover feature provides pop-up instant review of the words on that list, again in random order. By providing users with multiple opportunities throughout the day to read and review their words, Ultimate Spelling provides all of the benefits of the spaced repetition methodology in its spelling instruction.

Blocki, J., Cranor, L., Datta, A., and Komanduri, S. "Spaced Repetition and Mnemonics Enable Recall of Multiple Strong Passwords." Cornell University Library, January 3, 2015. PDF. http://arxiv.org/abs/1410.1490v2

Spaced repetition is a memory training tool that relies on frequent and consistent review of information; mnemonics is a memory technique that involves multiple ways of looking at that information, such as the incorporation of images or story lines. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University focused on the combination of spaced repetition and mnemonics in evaluating how best to train people to remember specific pieces of information: computer passwords. They found that by combining the two methodologies, the results in both ease of learning and retention were increased. Ultimate Spelling uses each method separately and together to help users learn and remember new spelling words by using the same words in multiple exercises, presenting spelling words in a variety of formats, and encouraging users to add information related to each word to make a personal connection that helps them to remember that word and its correct spelling.

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Yes, People Of All Ages Can Improve Their Spelling Skills





We tend to associate spelling practice with young children who are struggling to understand why the English language is not written like it’s pronounced, but the truth is, a person in any age group can improve – and should improve – their spelling skills.

Spelling bees are not an event reserved for schoolchildren. There are plenty of spelling bee competitions for adults taking place around the globe — proof that spelling is both loved and seen as fun by many people, no matter how old they are.

This summer, the 11th annual Great Grown-Up Spelling Bee was held in the city of Opelika, Alabama. In this spelling bee competition, teams of spellers competed against each other for a good cause: raising money for the literacy needs of Lee County. Apart from raising money and showing people how they can help the Lee County Literacy Coalition, the spelling bee allowed people to flaunt their spelling skills in a fun and adrenaline-boosting way.

The Opelika Spelling Bee is not the only adult-aimed competition in the United States. Senior spelling bees are also quite popular in many regions. Although not as well known as the Scripps National Spelling Bee, the Senior Spelling Bee allows people over the age 50 to compete against one another in the pursuit of the Senior Spelling Bee Champion title.

This summer the  Senior Spelling Bee competition was held in Knoxville, Tennessee. The champion was an English Professor,  Lauren Matz from Olean, New York.

Ms. Matz had to correctly spell out words such as “sullage,” “iridescence,” and “harmattan” to win the title. An interesting ranking of the 2014 National Senior Spelling Bee is that a couple, David and Nancy Mullard, won the second and third place prizes.

Official and unofficial spelling bee events remind us that spelling is an integral part of everyday communication. Spelling is omnipresent. We understand its importance when our autocorrect messes up our text messages, when our editor flags our misspellings, and when we have trouble spelling a last name that seemed to be so simple to spell when we heard it pronounced.

Improving your spelling can be a fun activity. Don’t think that spelling has to be a boring chore you need to get through quickly. Several spelling games and apps available in software or on line can help you improve on your orthography skills in a way that feels more like play and less like learning.

No matter your age, there’s a game or fun spelling activity you can engage with today, and improve your spelling performance right away. Just think of all the fancy words you’ll be able to spell correctly, and impress everyone!


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Yes, People Of All Ages Can Improve Their Spelling Skills

This Sixth Grader’s Invention Might Actually Save Us From Floods




Peyton Roertson, eleven-year-old inventor, found a solution for flooding with his amazing idea that even stunned scientists and engineer!


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This Sixth Grader’s Invention Might Actually Save Us From Floods

Into The World of Homophones: Discovering How They Are Affecting Our Writing





Unless you’re a ferociously passionate language user, chances are you’ve used a similar sounding word instead of the appropriate one, and more than once. How many times in the last week did  your Word editor flagged your errors when you confused “its” and “it’s” or “their” and “there”? Worse, what if your computer editor didn’t catch them at all?

What is a homophone?

A homophone is a word that is pronounced the same way as another word, but has a different meaning. This means that words like “to”, “two”, and “too” are homophones. We pronounce them the same, yet their meanings are completely different.

It’s not just simple words that get confused. The words “queue” and “cue” have a different spelling and meaning, but they too can be confused when you’re touch typing quickly and you’re already deep into your post-snack afternoon slump.

Why so much hate on homophones?

The English language has borrowed words from so many languages and cultures that it has become a very confusing and often unpredictable language to learn. “Tea” and “tee” are semantically different, but it’s unbelievably easy to swap one for the other in writing.

This is why people can get upset when homophones cause them problems. Homophones are little language bandits that steal away your thunder. Your writing will never be flawless because they’re bound to ruin it, you think. The thing is they’re embarrassingly good at it – but you can be better.

How to master homophone usage

The only foolproof solution to ban homophone misuse from your writing once and for all is to improve your writing skills.

Homophones, as we said above, are little bandits that wait for exhaustion to kick in to make their move and sneak into your writing. This means the best thing you can do is to equip yourself with the linguistic knowledge you  need to avoid them, or at least spot them when they creep in.

  • Revisit your elementary school years and practice your spelling and vocabulary skills. There’s no shame in trying to become a competent language user, no matter how old you are.

  • When learning new words, ensure you master both their spelling and their meaning.

  • It’s not enough to know how a word is pronounced, because chances are you’re going to confuse “keys” with “quays” at some point.

  • By properly learning a word’s orthography and meaning you are instantly minimizing the chances of confusing homophones in your writing. This will ensure that you avoid the always-awkward situation of having to explain yourself to your editor or manager. Yikes.

  • Practice your language skills with spelling games and even with spelling software. Good software will help you brush up on your language skills and give you a the tools you need to write clearly and proofread your writing afterward. Remember, “Ceiling the deal” is not an acceptable phrase any way you look at it.


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Into The World of Homophones: Discovering How They Are Affecting Our Writing

Hashtags: A Revolution In Trending Topics





People love – and hate – hashtags. These linkable words in your tweets are the best way to lead people to your posts by using concepts and words you’re playing with in your Tweets and posts.

By putting a hashtag in front of a word, as in #summerfestivals, you’ll make it easy for people to click on this hashtag to quickly access a newsfeed of tweets that pertain to summer festivals – including your own posts and tweets.

Once they started to be widely used, it soon became evident how crucial hashtags are for brands and companies. Social media professionals learned to use hashtags’ searchability to boost brand awareness and create trending topics around their products and services. This technique is especially useful when it’s done in combination with something called “newsjacking.”

Take for example Germany’s recent World Cup victory. Adidas Football tweeted this message after Germany’s victory: “There’s only one way to win a #WorldCup: #allin http://youtu.be/ApphNxn3dhs”. By using this breaking news to link to the company’s website and news feed, Adidas Football made sure they were keeping the corporate brand in everyone’s mind, with a simple tweet that looks like a timely message of support and congratulations to the German national football team, rather than the advertising and brand messaging that it actually is.

Marketing moves like this are frequently applied by social media professionals, because they generate more followers and build wider recognition for brands.

Getting your timing right and linking to intriguing content are two important ingredients to make hashtags work for you. Needless to say, hashtags need to be properly spelled. Despite the lack of space between words, the spelling of those words needs to be correct in order for your hashtag to actually participate in the trending topic you’re trying to be part of.

If you accidentally write #greatful instead of #grateful, don’t expect much of an engagement with it, at least not connected to the topic you were aiming for.

Twitter is meant to be a place for witty, interesting ideas and conversations, and if you bring your corporate, serious voice to it, you are likely to drive new fans and existing clients away. Speak in your target demographics’ voice; speak in a language they use and understand. On the other hand, you need to avoid sounding  like you’re trying to be too hip or too urban, as it might sound exaggerated and fake. Keep the conversations casual with simple, direct language.

A/B Testing With Hashtags

The great thing about hashtags is that they allow you to try out different key concepts related to your brand. See what the most important and relevant keywords for your company are and play around with them on Twitter through hashtags.

Next, see how much and how frequently people are responding and engaging with each version, how many new followers you get thanks to them, and how your overall community reacts to them. If a keyword has too much competition, try out a different one with a different focus. Once you find the ones that engage your followers and create conversation, ensure you also integrate them in other social media related activities, including your landing page, your blogs, and your website.

Hashtags are a great way to take advantage of trending topics or create your very own viral topic that everyone will talk about on social media.


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Hashtags: A Revolution In Trending Topics

How Kids Pronounced These 15 Words and How Adults Spell Them – Find Out!




Kids are just really good with messing up with words. But instead of correcting it, adults tend to just laugh it off because they speak of it in an endearing way anyway.

Astronaut in Restaurant = Restronaut

Alligator-Elevator? Rhyming It Is.

Another Rhyming Word for Babies

What Babies Speak of School Bus are COOL!

Boots + Ooops = Boops (LOL)

It’s Really Hard To Pronounce Though – For Kids!

Flies for Fries?

The Chicken Is In The Kitchen But The Kitchen Is Not The Chicken!

Yummy StrawBabies… I Mean Strawberries!

Kids Sometimes Neglect Starting Letter

Changing One Letter In A Word Is Normal for Babies

Pancakes are Mancakes Now?

Are Mustache Present In Pistachios?

The Nerd Noodles

A Crowd of Lobsters – MobSters!

Aren’t they A-D-O-R-A-B-L-E?


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How Kids Pronounced These 15 Words and How Adults Spell Them – Find Out!

Can You Spell These 11 Least-Known Words?





Aahhh … don’t you love the English language? It’s full of fancy words. Words that are tricky, words that are unpredictable – words that I can almost guarantee you will misspell.

The Center of Reading Research has looked into the English words that people are the least familiar with, using an online vocabulary test offered by Ghent University.

The participants had to press the “J” key if the word flashing before their eyes on the computer screen was a proper English word, and the “F” key if they didn’t know the word. Fewer than 3 in every 100 participants knew words like gossypol and alsike. Are you one of these people?

Here are the definitions of some of these obscure words. Be sure to learn their correct spelling in case you ever need to use them!

chersonese” – This word comes from the Greek “??????????” which means peninsula. A peninsula is a piece of land that has one of its four sites connected to the mainland of a territory while the other three are bordered by water.

dasyure” – According to the Dictionary.com website, dasyure is “any of several nocturnal, carnivorous marsupials of the genus Dasyurus and related genera, of Australia, Tasmania, and nearby islands, typically having a reddish or olive-brown coat marked with white spots.”

pyknic” – This is not an archaic spelling of the word “picnic.” According to the Oxford dictionary, “pyknic” is etymologically derived from the Greek word “??????” which means thick. It describes any living species with a tendency to get fat and have a “stocky physique or a rounded body and head.”

kalian” – A word of Persian origin, it refers to a Persian tobacco pipe that has the smoke go through water before drawing and inhaling the smoke. You might be more familiar with the terms “Hookah” or “Shisha”, the waterpipe use for smoking tobacco.

Yogh” – This is a phonological term that describes a palatal fricative widely used in Middle English. Its sound approximates the Modern English sound of the semivowel “y” as in the word“young.”

didapper” – The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines didapper as “a dabchick or other small grebe.” It’s the shortened form of dive-dapper.

ossify” – The process of making something impermeable to change. The word means to become hard like a bone, or to transform into bone.

stibnite” – The Merriam-Webster dictionary offers this word definition for stibnite: “a mineral that consists of the trisulfide of antimony and occurs in orthorhombic lead-gray crystals of metallic luster or in massive form.”

“penurious” – This is what many young people are by the end of each month: extremely poor or poverty-stricken. It also means parsimonious, having an unwillingness to spend money, or being stingy.

skullduggery” (also written with one “l”) – Dictionary.com defines “skullduggery” as trickery; it’s an informal word used to describe an underhanded deal.

brummagem” – This is a word that refers the English dialect spoken in Birmingham, or just relating to the city of Birmingham as a whole.

There you have it! 11 obscure words you can learn to spell, and impress everyone with your spelling knowledge!


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Can You Spell These 11 Least-Known Words?

Cli-Fi Movie Awards To Honor Best Climate-Themed Movies of 2014 (Guest Post)





Dan Bloom


Film festivals and film awards program are taking over the world, and one of the newest entries in the movie awards category is the first annual Cli-Fi Movie Awards Program, dubbed “The Cliffies” and set for global announcement in early 2015.

The Cliffies will recognize and honor the best cli fi movies of 2014, with categories for best director, best actors, best lines of dialog and best movie.

Sci fi movies, move over, here comes The Cliffies.

Maybe you have heard of the Los Angeles Feline Film Festival, the Food Film Fest or the International Festival of Short Fiction Films from the Islands of the World. Yes, movie festivals are like never before and they are growing year by year.

The Cliffies hopes to shine a bright Hollywood spotlight on the new crop of cli fi movies from both major studios and independents. Among the Cliffies nominations are: “Snowpiercer” from South Korea, “Into the Storm” from Hollywood and “The Rover” from Australia. Awards will also be given to films that best highlighted current climate issues,
and those that created the best marketing and PR strategies to raise awareness of the movies in relation to the very real issues of climate change and global warming.

The Cliffies are not just about glamor and glitz — and movie stars and famous directors. The Cli Fi Movie Awards intends to wake up the world about the very real and pressing issues humankind faces in regard to the what may very well be the Climapocalypse some 30 to 50 generations from now.

How do I know so much about The Cliffies? I created the event, and I am shepherding it to public awarenss worldwide as the awards are announced just around the same time as the Oscars are handed out in Los Angeles in late February 2015. I think it’s February 26.

Nominations are still welcome from film fans around the world, and just send your selections to danbloom@gmail.com with the subject line “The Cliffies”.

“People are always searching for communities that are like-minded,” Jane Rosenthal, a founder of the Tribeca Film Festival in New York, told the New York Times over the summer. “Niche festivals allow every oddity and every interest to come together. There are ones for every cultural group, for human rights, for religions. And then you have obscure interests you can curate for: from sumo wrestlers to reptilian advocates, agro-terrorists to films that the grand rabbi has blessed.”

She didn’t mention The Cliffies because she had not heard about them yet, but she has now. And her Tribeca festival partner Robert DeNiro has heard of the Cliffies now, too.

In Britain this summer, Sam Roberts of the New York Times reported, the Mental Health Foundation screened 15 films during an ”Anxiety Arts Festival”.

“The history of film is the history of anxiety,” the film program curator, Jonathan Keane, was quoted as saying, recalling that in 1896, filmgoers supposedly fled screaming from a Lumiere brothers movie because they believed the steam locomotive on the screen was careening right at them.

The Cliffies will not be a high-anxiety concept awards program. No, the awards will be grounded in our anxiety of the future of climate change and global warming, but they will honor those cli fi movies that best tried to tell the story in the way that movies can do, with
sound and light, with music and storytelling. In color.

An annual awards program, The Cliffies might very well pave the way for cli fi movies to be recognized and honored as the Oscars someday, too. Stay tuned.


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Reference Check: What Employers Do Before Hiring You





You have a killer resume and your first interview went surprisingly well. Now, the HR staff will delve into the danger zone: they will be contacting your references.

To ensure this step also goes well, you need to consider a few factors before even sending in your application. First, you need to decide who you choose to be your reference.

What does your future employer look for in a background and reference check?

  • Duties and responsibilities during your current or former jobs

  • Performance and communication skills

  • Salary verification

  • Mastery of skills pertaining to potential new job

  • Professional conduct

  • Academic qualifications

  • Strengths and weaknesses

  • Verifying the validity of resume claims

  • Confirming a company culture fit

Given the issues the HR staff will focus on when contacting your references, you need to make sure the references you’ve chosen see eye to eye with you as to what kind of employee you were.

Contact your potential references and let them know you’re considering them as a reference. If you sense some reluctance, you should probably contact another reference candidate.

Choose people and former employers that know you well so that they will paint an honest, positive image of who you are and what your strengths are.

There’s no right way to contact a potential reference. It can be done by email, phone, and even in person. It goes without saying that you need to contact your reference before the hiring manager does. Inform them about your intention and if they agree, give them some more information on the company you are trying to get in. It’s best to have fewer good references than having multiple references that include some bad ones, as this could eliminate you from the hiring process.

When does the reference and background check take place?

There’s no fixed schedule for when a reference check is made. Most companies run a reference check post-interview to narrow down the field, and perhaps one more after they’ve selected the finalists to be their job candidates.

Other companies follow a different policy, in which they run a background check before even calling up candidates for an interview to ensure they’re not wasting HR personnel’s time on unqualified, unfit candidates.

To be prepared for both scenarios it’s best that you have references available in case these are requested from you during the interview, or right after the interview is over.

For extra interview points, bring a copy of your reference list along to the interview and be ready to hand one to your interviewer. It makes a good first impression to see someone act proactively and in such an organized manner. Ensure it has no typos and spelling mistakes in it, though! Even if it’s just a list of names, make sure it’s as professional and well-formatted as your resume and cover letter. Good luck.


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Reference Check: What Employers Do Before Hiring You