

We've put together a support guide covering all the basics of how to access and use Satchel:One, your school email, and Microsoft Office apps (Word, Powerpoint, Excel, etc)ĭistance Learning Support Guide.pdf Our Remote Learning Policy We strongly encourage parents and carers to talk through the information below with students so that you can work together to get your learning from home right. The information below explains how we want you to continue learning from home. It is really important to continue to engage with your learning during any period of school closure. If your child does not know their Satchel:One login, please use our IT Help Form to request a password reset. (Though I wouldn't be surprised if there is some regional variation with this).In order to learn from home, your child must access Satchel:One (Show My Homework) by clicking the linked image below. So (apart from possible ambiguity with 'on') I think they are more or less equivalent, but "help with" sounds a lot more natural in the present day. Makes it clear that the purpose of the help has something to do with the roof, but can't be read to specify where the help takes place, whereasĬould mean the same as the previous sentence, or it could mean that I'm offering to give help which will happen on the roof, but I'm not saying what the help is with (maybe I'd be helping to rescue a cat - so I'm helping 'on the roof', but not helping 'with the roof'). Sometimes "help on " might be a bit ambiguous because "on" might be taken to suggest that the help takes place on top of the object. There seems to be almost no difference in usage frequency between British English and American English and I personally can't think of any instances where "help with" or "help on" can be used and the other can't.

Looking at n-grams, it seems that before 1910 "help on" was standard, and since then "help with" has rapidly become a lot more common.
