Just
because your kids have a long summer break stretching ahead of them doesn't
mean you have to throw in the towel and use the TV as a babysitter.
It may seem like a daunting task to plan enriching,
stimulating summer activities for your kids, but the good news is that keeping
your kids engaged and entertained is simpler than you may think. It's also one
surefire way to make sure that your kids legitimately enjoy their summer
vacation - without complaining of boredom.
Continued
Learning Is Key
According to the assistant professor of curriculum and
instruction at the University of Alabama at Birmingham’s School of Education
and author of Supporting Students in a Time of Core
Standards, Tonya Perry, PhD, children's learning is
affected by taking a two-month break each summer. Continued learning both
inside and outside of school doors is critical to help kids retain important
concepts and grasp new information when they start the next school year.
As a result, many kids who don't participate in
educational activities over summer break often score significantly lower on
standardized tests after concluding summer vacation, compared to test scores
from the beginning of the summer.
Start
with Summer Reading
If you're pressed for time, summer reading is one great
activity to keep your kids occupied and enrich their learning at the same time
- at no charge to you. You can sign your kids up for a summer reading program
at the local library; if there isn't a library close by, there are several
websites with online summer reading programs, including Scholastic and Barnes
& Noble.
For example, in the Barnes
& Noble summer reading program, participating kids can
read any eight books and record them in their online reading journal. Once the
reading journal has been completed, it must be turned into a local Barnes &
Noble, where your child will earn a free book for completing their summer
reading list. This rewards-based program makes it easier for kids to stick to a
reading schedule when there is a prize in sight for finishing their summer
reading.
Focus
on Activity
Keep in mind that summer education doesn't have to
revolve around books exclusively. When you think outside of the box, you can
include fun activities in your day-to-day schedule that will keep your kids
active and teach them something at the same time.
Why
not try growing summer vegetables in a homemade vegetable garden as a family?
This is one simple way to teach your kids about science by encouraging them to
research seasonal vegetables online that will grow well in your climate and
plotting their own garden chart. Your kids will have something to look forward
to each day as they tend to their garden and enjoy the fruits of their labor!
Bethany Ramos is a full-time freelance writer with a
five-month-old baby who is passionate about childhood development. She also co-owns her own e-commerce website, The Coffee Bump.
1 comment:
Learning never stops in anyone's life. Even elder people also learn everyday. Everyday we learn something new from our day to day life. So, childhood is the most important time to learn values and rules, regulations etc. And in holidays with parents a child can learn these things.
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