INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Most checks come with a check number. Checks come in books and are all numbered. The check number indicates which number check the recipient was on when he wrote the check. The check number is usually in the upper righthand corner of a check. It also reappears along the bottom, the last in a series of number sequences you'll find on a check. Near the top of the check and to the right, you will find the date. This is the date the check was written by the payor. It usually appears in a small box labeled "Date." The date of the check is important. While banks can honor checks older than six months, they are not legally required to do so. Along the bottom of the check, you will see two numbers. These numbers are the routing number and the account number.  The first number, which will be nine digits long, is the routing number. Routing numbers are numbers assigned to individual banks. Their purpose is to track where money that is exchanged in a transaction comes from and goes to. The next number, which ranges in length, is the account number. This is the number associated with the payor's individual bank account.

SUMMARY: Find the check number. Locate the date. Differentiate between the routing number and account number.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: This will usually be somewhere below (or in the general vicinity of) the "Password" field. Most accounts will allow you to reset your password in one or more of the following ways:  By receiving a password link via phone (SMS) By receiving a password link via email By answering security questions This is where knowing as much about the password creator as possible will come in handy. Failing that, you'll need physical access to the password creator's phone or email address. If they use an iOS device that's synced to the computer you're on, you may be able to view the password reset link in the Mac's messages. This is a risky move since it also alerts the password creator that you're altering the password. As long as you have everything needed to successfully receive the password reset link (or to answer the security questions), you should be able to reset the password, thereby gaining access to the account.

SUMMARY: Locate and click the forgotten password link. Review your password recovery options. Make sure you have the information needed to reset the password. Follow the on-screen instructions.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Scales help teach beginning students how the notes flow and relate to each other. Scales are the building blocks of music, and will make it easier for your student to learn songs.  Beginners often find scales boring. Emphasize their importance and spend a little time working on them, but don't devote a large portion of your lessons to practicing scales. The chords in the CAGED system are C, A, Am, G, E, Em, and D. These are open chords with relatively simple shapes that are easy to learn and transition between.  There are plenty of free resources online that you can use to get started teaching this system. Once your student learns these chords, they can play thousands of 3- and 4-chord popular songs. Most beginners need to build strength in their fingers to play guitar, but basic finger exercises can be monotonous. Arpeggios reinforce scales and also form the basis for some impressive guitar solos, so beginners will enjoy playing them.  Since you have to use alternate picking, practicing arpeggios builds strength and dexterity in both hands. Have your student start slow, and work on playing faster and faster. That speed and dexterity will translate into other aspects of their guitar playing.

SUMMARY: Use scales to find notes on the fretboard. Introduce chords with the CAGED system. Build finger dexterity with arpeggios.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Sway them from side to side. You should be able to complete a full sway that goes from left to right within one count of the four-count beat. Your arms should also cross in front of each other as you wobble your hips. Keep your arms crossing to the beat, as well. Your shoulders and hips will take turns swaying from front to back, causing your torso to wobble from front to back. When the hips are toward the front, your shoulders should be toward the back, and vice versa. Think of a waving flag. Try to mimic the way the flag waves, wiggles, and wobbles in the breeze using your torso. The easiest way to occupy your hands while you twist is to do a hand roll, in which your two hands circle each other front and back at the front side of your body, roughly at chest level. Do this hand roll to the beat. The hand roll is not the only move you could use, though. You could also point side to side, wave your arms, or do whatever else feels natural with your own personal groove. This part of the wobble is usually just improvised.

SUMMARY:
Wobble your hips. Wobble your torso. Use your hands.