EFFORT
Being Willing to Work Hard
A Study Place - Younger
*Study Skills
*Building Organizational Abilities
All children need their own place at home to do homework.
Even with this special place, they might still use
the dining room table. But they gain a sense of the
importance of homework from having a place of their
own. Fancy equipment is not needed. Use old furniture.
Cut it down to size as needed. you need a table, a
chair, a light.
Walk through your house with your child to find that
special study corner. It need not be big, but it needs
to be personal. With your child, find the furniture
needed; check the attic, ask friends, or visit nearby
garage sales.
Paint cardboard boxes or orange crates for bookcases.
Latex paint is easy to clean. Encourage your child
to decorate the study corner; a plant and a bright
desk blotter do wonders. Save children's artwork from
school for the extra touch.
A study place can be a desk, or it can be a modest
lapboard for a child to use atop a bed. What is basic
to both is their message that studying is valued in
this house.
A Study Place - Older
*Study Skills
*Researching and Charting Information
There is a better way than nagging children every
day about homework. This activity enables children
to keep track - on their own - of what has to be done.
You need paper and a marker.
Use a sturdy, large piece of paper to make a homework
chart that can be posted on the wall. Here's what
one looks like:
| Days |
English |
Math |
Social Studies |
Science |
| Monday |
|
|
|
|
| Tuesday |
|
|
|
|
| Wednesday |
|
|
|
|
| Thursday |
|
|
|
|
Friday
|
|
|
|
|
Each day after school, your child makes checks to
represent homework assignments. To show completed
homework, the check gets circled. Attach to the chart
a marker or pen so that it is always handy.
Talking About Homework
Talk about assignments with your child after they
are completed. This is more of a conversation than
a checkup. Was the assignment difficult? Easy? Would
your child like to know more? consider follow-up trips
to a museum or library. Homework can be a starting
point for your child's continuing interests - pursued
with pleasure and without assignments.