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Table of Contents Let's Read! |
Learning Partners Let's Succeed in School! To succeed in school, parents need to be involved in their children's learning. It's important to be involved early, and it's important to stay involved. Learning the skills for success takes place at home as well as at school. Here are some of the things that parents can do at home and at school. At Home
At School
Activities for Success What Do You Hear? Listening is a skill that young children need to succeed in school. 1. Make up a story. You make up one sentence, and then your child makes up one sentence. Repeat until you're ready to end it. 2. With a group, all but one person close their eyes. The person with eyes open makes a sound (with keys, paper, a spoon tapping a glass) that everyone else tries to guess. 3. Clap your hands to tap out a rhythm. Have your child listen and then clap that same rhythm back to you. Where Did I Put That?
Being organized will help a child control his or her learning activities. This will increase your child's self-confidence. 1. Turn a cardboard box (big enough for notebooks) into a special school box to hold all school things when your child comes home. The box would keep homework, books, supplies, hats, gloves, and other things needed for the next school day. 2. Have your child decorate the box with pictures, words, or artwork and his or her name to make it his own. Each child in the family can have a separate box. A Daily Family Routine
The goal is to encourage children to be self-reliant while having structure and rules. Family members can provide the structure and work together to set the rules. 1. Assign chores and household tasks. 2. Encourage good health habits (proper rest and exercise, nutrition, and regular meal schedules). 3. Eat meals together. 4. Have a firm bedtime. How Much Time Will It Take? Before your child starts a project, plan out how long it will take to do each step. 1. Choose a big assignment to talk about, such as a research project. Write down the steps needed to complete the job. 2. Work backwards from when the project is due. Estimate how long each step will take and decide when that step must be started to meet the deadline. Put start and finish dates next to these steps. 3. Arrange the steps of the assignment on a calendar or homework chart. Let's
Read! Let's Do Math! Let's Do
Science! |
Resources: Information was based on Helping Your Child Succeed in School ; Strong Families, Strong Schools; Hard Work and Higher Expectations, U.S. Department of Education .
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