About
Ricketts & Associates - Intercultural Communication
Ricketts and Associates, specializes in soft
skill development and creates educational modalities that enhance
individual and organizational effectiveness. Proven learning
strategies are incorporated into training designs that are relevant,
interactive and educational. The result is a training experience that
motivates, empowers and delivers lasting positive results.
Our trained and
experienced course designers customize the training experience based on
the client’s expressed and assessed needs. Most importantly, we focus on
the overriding learning objective relevant to the goals and objectives of
the organization. This sole proprietorship partners with a select group
of experienced trainers who work domestically and abroad to serve small,
medium or large public and private sector organizations.
Our services include
assessment, tracking, evaluation, curriculum design, course development
and delivery, and one-on-one coaching for top level managers and
executives. A specialty of this company is customized course
development, designed to meet the specific education and training needs of each
client. We also offer several off-the-shelf courses that are
currently available.
[Click here to view a
partial list of those courses]
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NEWS:
Complementary Learning Program
[
click here to hear the interview ]
Every year, the Federal, State, and
local governments spend millions of dollars trying to boost academic
performance in Oakland. They do this by bringing after-school programs and
other services to the district's lowest-income schools. According to the
California Department of Education, last year, only 42% of Oakland second
graders could read at the second grade level. But, Oakland Unified is
doing something about it. Rather than just throwing more money at the
problem, the district adopted a new educational model called Complementary
Learning. It's aim? To get schools to work and communicate with the
after-school programs and other outside services working with their
students. KALW’s Eloise Quintanilla visited two Oakland elementary schools
to see whether this vision had become a reality. She found radically
different results.

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