The words "Schools Out For Summer" strike joy into the hearts of children and often a sigh of relief for parents who are just as eager to take a break from homework as their progeny. However taking a complete break from the books for the entire summer can be problematic.
Studies have shown that children forget between 1 and 3 months of school during the summer vacation. While reading is the least effected, the most impacted subjects are spelling and math. Obviously it is important for children to have time to play and relax -- to just enjoy being kids during the summer. Children should not be pushed into a high-pressure study schedule over summer vacation. But parents can take steps to slow down that loss of knowledge and erosion of skills.
First and foremost, keep children reading over the summer but try to work in some nonfiction as well as fiction onto the reading list. Take a lesson from many experienced teachers and pick a few spelling words from the books children are reading. Perhaps tie test results into some special summer reward and you will have eagerly awaited spelling bees.
Writing is one skill that often erodes during summer, but you can give children a writing journal and a weekly goal. They can write about whatever you think will interest your child. They can report on their baseball games, make up elaborate games, or simply report on the books they are reading. There are lots of great writing prompts out there for kids if you run dry of ideas. It does not matter so much what your child writes so long as they spend time writing so they can work on handwriting skills as well as keep in the groove of putting words on paper. One easy writing prompt is to have the child describe people, places, objects, pets and other animals, insects, and games. Lists are another easy writing prompt -- favorite things, worst things, etc. Then on another day you can use those descriptions and lists to generate another writing prompt.
Math skills might seem the hardest thing to work on during summer but in fact these can be the easiest. Math does not have to come out of a book and you can easily work a lot of math lessons into those long car rides or plane trips as you go on a family vacation. Try counting car headlights (counting by 2s) as you drive or fingers in a restaurant or plane (counting by 5s). Find various shapes around the house and then trace them to create yet more complex forms. Get the kids involved in cooking and learning about measurements. Give the kids a ruler and notebook and tell them to measure various objects around the house. Empty out your pocket change and have the kids sort it and create word problems with the coins.
There are lots of activities you can do at home without the expense of special tools, workbooks or programs that will actively engage your child in learning and help keep their school skills sharp. They will not even notice they are learning because they will enjoy these projects so much.
» left by Steven French(248) Steven French (64 days 12 hours ago.)
Reading is so important, it never ceases to amaze me how many people find a way to graduate school without reading or writing skills. Getting kids interested in books is great, fiction or non-fiction, they are going to learn something either way. I've been taking advantage of the summer weather to get my kids interested in Astronomy, and they are both reading books their grade level on the subject of their own free will, this makes me so proud. Respond to this comment
» left by Teresa Ortiz(5,015) Teresa Ortiz (61 days 14 hours ago.)
Hi Deanna, these are great tips! We would play dominos and scrabble with our kids during the summer. It helped keep their math and spelling skills in check and they didn't even realize it. Our youngest will be a senior next year, and there is no way he is going to do anything that remotely resembles "learning" this summer. Sigh. They grow up and think they get smart. But it was a great tool while they were in elementary and middle school. He does work full time in the summer, so that's somthing :-) thanks again for sharing these helpful hints.
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