homework.jpgToday is the last day of school for my son and daughter. They are happy about it. But it was me, their mom, that was dancing around the kitchen this morning and singing about the last day of school as I made them French toast.

Why? No homework for two and a half months!

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OK, I don’t actually do their homework but my husband and I have to spend time with the little buggers every day and help them out with assignments or go over them. It’s tough on some days when you’re so burnt out from work you can barely make dinner.

And jeez, the homework they do doesn’t seem like what we did in school many moons ago. My daughter Circe does math in a whole new way. And honestly, I was never that good at doing my homework when I was in school. I actually hated homework. And it didn’t help that my older sister Vaso had a bulging brain.

That’s why I was intrigued when I heard about a tutoring benefit semiconductor giant Intel recently started offering its employees.

“All children of Intel’s U.S.-based employees in grades 4-12 now have free access to Tutor.com, an innovative education service that Intel Capital invested in last year. Intel kids can log on to Tutor.com seven days a week, 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Pacific Time, and connect with a professional tutor for help tackling homework and studying multiple subjects,” according to an Intel spokeswoman.

This is brilliant, I thought. I must talk to a worker that used the service.

The company connected me with father of four, Mark Dominguez, a technical program manager in the sales training group.

Talk about a man who needs homework help.

I asked him what he thought when Intel announced the new bene:

“Are you kidding me, I did a back flip,” he recalls.

The system is simple, students interact with the tutor via online chat and a whiteboard they can both write on.

So far, Dominguez’ 13 year old son Kyle is the only one that has used the service and it’s worked out great.

“The whole idea is that they complete homework as soon as they get home from school,” he explains. But unfortunately, he and his wife, who both work, aren’t always there to help them when they hit a homework snag.

Kyle did indeed hit a snag with his 7th grade algebra homework recently and the cyber tutor was there to help.

The huge value of the service, as Dominguez sees it, is “immediate access to somebody familiar with high school math, versus mom or dad saying ‘let me see if I can find that brain cell.’”

Hey, that brain cell is harder to find these days for many of us tired, working moms and dads.

Kudos to Intel for providing something that may seem small to some, but big to toiling parents.

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