"Parents and families are the first and most important teachers. If families teach
a love of learning, it can make all the difference in the world to our children." Richard
W. Riley - U.S. Secretary of Education
Educational research has made it clear that parents who are actively involved in their
children's learning at home help their children become more successful learners in and out
of school. During the early adolescent years, adult guidance is especially important.
Here are some reading, writing, math, social studies and health Home Learning Recipe
activities. These have been developed by the Home and School Institute. Parents of sixth
to eighth graders find them to be easy and enjoyable ways to work with the school--using
materials they have at home to build their children's skills. These activities will also
help preteens and parents talk together about matters both care about, which improve
family communication at this crucial time.
Reading Activities
Read All About It --Introduce your child to the many kinds of
information in the daily newspaper. Ask your child to find the pages containing news about
government leaders, editor's opinions, weather reports, car sales, house and apartment
rentals, and want ads. Discuss how to use this information.
Follow the News--As a family, choose an important news event to follow
for a day or two. Ask each person to find as much information on the topic as
possible--read newspapers, listen to the radio, watch TV news. Then talk about what
everyone learned.
Writing Activities
Nice Words --Make someone happy. Write each family member's name on
separate sheets of paper. Add a note or a drawing--for example, "I like the way you
make breakfast," or "You make me happy when you do the dishes." Fold the
paper and put them in a bag. Ask each person to choose a paper from the bag. Place the
notes where they can be found by family members. And watch for the smiles!
Looking at Advertisements--Take a closer look. Help your children
improve their thinking and writing skills by looking carefully at newspaper, magazine, and
TV advertisements. What is the main point of the ad? What details does it use to
communicate its message? For example, a strong, handsome man holding a soft drink in an
expensive car with a beautiful woman at his side is telling us something about the soft
drink.
Pro and Con: What Do You Think?--Make a family game of discussing a
special issue--for example, "Teenagers should be allowed to vote," or
"There should never be any homework." Ask your youngsters to think of all the
reasons they can to support their views. Then, ask them to think of reasons against their
views. Which views are most convincing? For variety, assign family members to teams and
have teams prepare their arguments pro and con.
Math Activities
How Much Does It Costs? --Put math skills to work. Help your children
understand living costs by discussing household expenses with them. For example, make a
list of monthly bills--heat, electricity, telephone, mortgage or rent. Fold the paper to
hide the costs and ask your youngsters to guess the cost of each item. Unfold the paper.
How do the estimates compare with the actual costs? Were they close?
Math Marks--Are they really necessary? Ask your children to look
through the newspaper to find and list as many percentages and decimal numbers as
possible--sale prices, sports scores, bank rates. Ask what would happen without those
marks?
Living Within Our Means--Teach children who have allowances or regular
spending money how to budget. Ask them to make a two-column list of expenses and income.
Under expenses, they list what they expect to spend for movies, bus tokens, lunches, etc.
Then, have your youngsters add all the expenses and subtract the total from the income.
Ask them to think of ways to reduce their spending. If their income is more than their
expenses, talk about a savings plan.
Social Studies Activities
Expanding Horizons --Help your child learn about people from different
countries. Suggest talking to neighbors from foreign countries, reading library books
about other cultures, reading newspapers, and watching TV specials. Let Your Voice
Be Heard--Promote good citizenship. Help your child write a letter to the editor
of the local newspaper about an issue affecting children. For example, suggest that a bike
path be built near the school or that a city event be planned for youngsters. Children are
citizens and their ideas are worth hearing.
Health Activity
Stretch, Run, Bike --Ask your child to do at least one kind of exercise
every day. For example, run or walk briskly for 10 minutes. Walk, when possible, instead
of riding, for any distance less than a mile. Have your youngster make a week-long
exercise plan. Try to think of a modest reward for sticking to the plan and exercise right
along with your child.
Remember--keep the talk flowing. It's the stuff high test scores are made of and it's
the basis for parent/child closeness.
Think of these as starter activities to get your ideas going. There are opportunities
everywhere for teaching and learning.
Take a little time to do a lot of good!
For more information on other publications to help your children learn call:
1-800-USA-LEARN
U.S. Department of Education
These home learning "recipes" have been tested and
developed by Dr. Dorothy Rich, author of MEGASKILLS ®, for the National Education
Association. Reprinted with permission of the National Education Association and The Home
and School Institute, 1994. Reproduction of this brochure is permitted.
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