Showing posts with label Useful tips for Parents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Useful tips for Parents. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Purposeful Parenting

Five tips on how to be a purposeful parent

This all starts with effective communication.
  1. Take time to listen: Adolescents do not always want advice. Parents can discuss solutions rather than deliver lectures, and use reassurance, encouragement, and support. It is not helpful when parents respond to their adolescent's concerns by minimizing what the young person is feeling or saying, "you'll get over it."
  2. Be aware of where adolescents are and what they watch: When adolescents are not at home or school, it is a good idea for parents to know where they are. Also, restrict adolescents viewing inappropriate movies.
  3. Take concrete steps to help adolescents avoid illicit behaviour: Be home at key times of the day such as in the morning, after school, at dinner time, and at bed time. Parents can also : Explain why illicit behaviour is harmful.Communicate their expectations and rules relating to these kinds of behaviours.Check in with their adolescents on a regular basis. Get to know their adolescent's friends. Communicate with their adolescents to find out whether he or she is making healthy choices.
  4. Eat dinner as a family: By eating meals with their adolescents and helping them to stay active. Parents can help teens to eat nutritious diet and to exercise regularly.
  5. Pay attention to your own well-being : Include a physical activity, a healthy diet, and plenty of sleep into the daily routine.
Source: La Verne Bishop, executive director of Hale

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Ideas for communicating with families about children's developmental stages


What are your goals in sharing knowledge about child development with students’ families, and how do you go about it?

We can communicate children's development within the context of school work and classroom happenings. Schools can bring in the topic to parents while they’re talking about assignments, school activities, and lessons .
According to the Responsive Classroom Newsletter released in February 2004, help parents understand our teaching and assessment approaches. For example, if families know that it’s developmentally normal for seven-year-olds to begin writing smaller and faster than before, they’re more likely to understand why their child’s writing may suddenly look messier than in first grade. It’s important to communicate that we focus more on the content of children’s writing than the look of their handwriting.

We invite families to participate in activities like, read to children in the classroom, and help on projects or field trips. This allows them to see children’s abilities within the context of a classroom setting. For example,When children do an activity involving planting seeds.which can create a big mess, where parent volunteers might need to offere to stay after and clean up. Teachers can let the kids clean up. Explain parents that one common developmental trait of seven-year-olds is that they love to clean. When they’re taught how to clean and are given the responsibility (and their own personal sponges), they rise to the occasion.

Pat Fekete, teaches fifth grade at Hawken Lower School in Cleveland, Ohio. She has twenty years of experience teaching fifth through eighth grade language arts and has a passion for teaching writing. Pat is a Responsive Classroom certified consulting teacher. She has several goals in sharing information about child development with families:

  • to reduce families’ anxiety about their children’s learning and behavior
  • to help families understand that all children develop at different rates, and that the rate may be influenced by personality, culture, and environment
  • to help families see how children’s developmental characteristics affect what we can expect of them in school

Patty Lawrence, teaches second grade at Hunnewell School in Wellesley, Massachusetts, job sharing with her teaching partner Amy Clouter. Patty is a Responsive Classroom certified consulting teacher and a former professor at Wheelock College Graduate School in Boston, Massachusetts, states the students she now teach are ten going on eleven, moving from childhood into adolescence. Their families tend to have a lot of concerns about the often astounding changes their children go through during this time. One of her main goals, is to help families understand this stage of development so they can best support their children.

Early in the year,she prepared a two-sided handout for families, drawing on the book Yardsticks: Children in the Classroom Ages 4–14. One side of the handout shows the typical developmental characteristics of ten-year-olds; the other side shows those of eleven-year-olds. She suggest that families keep the charts handy—on the refrigerator, in an often-used drawer, etc.

In casual conversations throughout the year, she tries to remind families to look at the charts, just so they develop a baseline awareness of developmental issues. Then, whenever a parent or guardian specifically expresses some concern about a child’s new “strange” or “outrageous” behaviors, she again refers to the charts.

For example, a parent recently told her at a February conference, “I can’t believe my child’s behavior. She used to be so quiet and sweet. Now she’s challenging everything, saying things aren’t fair. And she’s so into herself!”

“Remember those developmental charts?” Patty Lawrence said. She took out the copy that she kept close at hand. She flipped it over to the eleven-year-old side. “Your child recently turned eleven. Let’s see what this says about elevens.” There on the chart was listed, “Moody; sensitive. Oppositional; tests limits. Loves to argue. Self-absorbed.”

Of course, even though these traits are normal, adults still need to intervene with guidance and redirection. But knowing that the traits are normal helps families feel that the situation is manageable. Often, that feeling clears the way for them to know what to do to help their child.

The more we educate and remind families—and ourselves—of children’s developmental stages, the more we can respect our students’ needs at each age and offer the academic and social curriculum that will benefit them the most.

Gail Zimmerman is a literacy specialist at Jackson Mann Elementary School in Boston, Massachusetts. She has taught in the Boston public schools for over thirty years and has been a Responsive Classroom certified consulting teacher for nine years. As a counselor, she gets calls from families with concerns not just about their children’s school behavior, but also home behavior. One of her roles is to help families understand what’s normal behavior for children at various ages and help families learn parenting strategies that support healthy development.

She finds that using careful, empathic language when talking with families is key. She always begin by validating the family’s concern. The parents of a young six-year-old recently complained that their child seemed very oppositional lately. “Even when we tell her many times not to do something, she continues to do it.” After further listening, it became clear to her that the child’s behavior was not so much defiance, but a kind of impulsiveness.

“That kind of behavior can be hard to live with. No wonder you feel concerned,” She said. Although impulsiveness is quite normal for six-year-olds, it was important to show empathy for the parents’ feelings before offering further comments or advice.

Next,she help families see the difference between socially unacceptable and developmentally abnormal. “While that behavior may try your patience and may not be socially acceptable, it’s normal for her age,” she might say. She then shares some supportive, calm ways that teachers might work with a child in that situation. This often gives families ideas to try at home.

Using empathic, clear language as well as providing supportive strategies helps families see this and leave the conversation more assured.

Source from: Responsive Classroom Newsletter: February 2004, Q&A with Pat Fekete, Patty Lawrence, Amy Wade, and Gail Zimmerman


Monday, December 5, 2011

What teachers really want to tell parents by Ron Clark

According to Ron Clark, new teachers remain in our profession an average of just 4.5 years, and many of them list "issues with parents" as one of their reasons for throwing in the towel.

So, what can we do to stem the tide? What do teachers really need parents to understand?

Ron Clark advices....
We are educated professionals who work with kids every day and often see your child in a different light than you do. If we give you advice, don't fight it. Take it, and digest it in the same way you would consider advice from a doctor or lawyer. I have become used to some parents who just don't want to hear anything negative about their child, but sometimes if you're willing to take early warning advice to heart, it can help you head off an issue that could become much greater in the future.

Please quit with all the excuses
He suggests parents
if they really want to help theirr children be successful, stop making excuses for them.
"Some parents will make excuses regardless of the situation, and they are raising children who will grow into adults who turn toward excuses and do not create a strong work ethic. If you don't want your child to end up 25 and jobless, sitting on your couch eating potato chips, then stop making excuses for why they aren't succeeding. Instead, focus on finding solutions."

Read more at http://edition.cnn.com/2011/09/06/living/teachers-want-to-tell-parents/index.html

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Develop your child's writing


FOR GENERATIONS, parents have read bedtime stories to their children, hoping to help them develop language, vocabulary and creativity. But new educational research shows that writing is as fundamental to a child's development as reading.
Five keys to help your kids write:
  1. Word Power. As children's vocabulary grow, they are drawn to new words they hear. Help them practice using new words by writing notes to each other, creating a "word jar" with your child's favourite words and talking about new words you hear in songs.
  2. Reading aloud. This is a great way to teach kids grammar, syntax and other structures of writing. Try all genres: poetry, non - fiction, even picture books.
  3. Identity. Just the way your child's favourite colour changes by the minute, so will her style of writing. As she tries out new ways of expressing herself on paper, expose your child to a variety of writing styles, then let her develop her own writing identity.
  4. Time. make writing time sacred and consistent.
  5. Environment. To create the ideal writing environment for your aspiring writer, you'll need a surface, writing tools, good lighting and a little bit of inspiration.
Source from: Your Child's Writing, Pam Allyn

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

ކިޔަވާކުދިންގެ ޢާއްމު ޤަވާޢިދު

ކިޔަވާކުދިންގެ ޔުނީފޯމާއި ހެދުން

ކޮންމެ ކުއްޖަކު ވެސް އެ ކުއްޖެއްގެ ސްކޫލަށް ޙާޒިރު ވާންވާނީ އަދި، ސްކޫލްގެ ނަމުގައި ދާންޖެހޭ ކޮންމެ ތަނަކަށް ދާންވާނީ ސްކޫލުން ކަނޑައަޅާ ޔުނީފޯމެއްގަ އެވެ. މިއިން އިސްތިސްނާކުރެވޭނީ ސްކޫލް ޔުނީފޯމު ނޫން ހެދުމެއްގައި ކުރުމަށް ސްކޫލުން ކަނޑައަޅާ ކަންކަމެވެ.

ސްކޫލް ޔުނީފޯމާ އެކު އަންހެންކުދިންނަށް ގަހަނާގެ ގޮތުގައި ބޭނުންކުރެވޭނީ ޢާންމުގޮތެއްގައި ކަރުގައި އަޅާފައި އޮންނަ ފަށެކެވެ. އަދި މި ފަށް އޮންނަންޖެހެނީ ނުފެންނަގޮތަށެވެ.

ފިރިހެންކުދިން އެއްވެސް ބާވަތެއްގެ ގަހަނާއެއް ޔުނީފޯމާ އެކު ނުވަތަ ސްކޫލުން ބޭރުގައި ވިޔަސް އަޅައިގެން ނުވާނެ އެވެ. މި ކަމުގައި ބެލެނިވެރިން ޒިންމާވެލައްވަންވާނެ އެވެ.

ކޮންމެ ކިޔަވާ ކުއްޖަކު ބޮލުގެ އިސްތަށިގަނޑު ސާފުކޮށް ބަލަހައްޓައި، ނިޔަފަތި ދިގުވިޔަނުދީ ކަނޑަންވާނެ އެވެ. އަދި ތަމްޘީލުތަކުގައި ކުރަންޖެހޭ މޭކަޕް ފިޔަވައި ސްކޫލް ޔުނީފޯމުގައި އަދި ސްކޫލްގެ ކަންތައްތަކުގައި އުޅޭ އިރު، އެއްވެސް ބާވަތެއްގެ މޭކަޕެއް ނުކުރެވޭނެ އެވެ. އިސްތަށިގަނޑު ޑައިކޮށް، ކުލަޖައްސައި، ޖެލް ލުމަކީ މަނާކަމެކެވެ.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Activities to Keep Kids' Brains Active during School Holidays: by Cara Bafile Education World®

Amuse and entertain your kids and hope for the best for your students, keep their minds working all holiday long! : Activities to fight holiday boredom and build thinking skills.

It's holidays -- Teachers have bid farewell to students, hoping their gleefully escaping charges don't forget everything they've learned during the school year. It's also the time of year when nervous parents take on the challenge of keeping their children physically busy and mentally active during the long holidays.
To help those efforts, the ideas offered will not only reinforce skills taught during the year, but also entertain students through the holidays. Hope parents and their children make the most of the lazy, hazy days!
• Teach kids to cook with the step-by-step lessons and recipes at Cooking With Kids from http://www.childrensrecipes.com/. The site also includes measurement reminders, safety tips, and suggestions for involving kids in the cooking process.
• Create musical instruments from materials found around the house. Need help? Enchanted Learning provides instructions for such Musical Instruments as a rattle, box guitar, maraca, and rain stick.
• Cool down by making Ice Cream in a Bag. The simple technique produces delicious ice cream in about 5 minutes. What ice cream varieties will you and your child concoct?
• Plan with your child a family activity day. Decide how much money to spend, and help your child research events and activities in your area and choose an affordable activity the whole family can enjoy. Remind your child to be sure to allow enough time for the activity, and to remember to include food in the day's plan. (Don't forget to bring a camera and take lots of pictures. Your child can mount and label each photo and create a family scrapbook of your special day. You might provide the questions below to help guide your child's thoughts as they plan this special day.
1. Describe the event or activity your family will attend.
2. Will everyone in the family enjoy this activity? Why do you think so?
3. What do you need to arrange ahead of time? Will you need to purchase tickets? Pack a lunch? Make reservations?
4. What supplies or materials will you need?
5. What costs will be involved?
• Kids rarely have the opportunity to design their own rooms to best suit their individual needs. Invite your child to devote some thought to ways to improve his or her living space. Explore with your child Kids' Room Decorating Ideas and Creative Kid's Rooms to find ways your child might individualize his or her room without spending a great deal of money. Then have the child draw the layout of their "new" room. The following questions might guide kids as they consider the possibilities:
1. Other than sleeping, what do you do most often in your room? Play games? Work on a computer? Listen to music? Do homework? Entertain guests?
2. What furniture or other items do you use most often? What do you use least often?
3. What kind of storage do you need? A dresser? A bookcase? A clothes hamper? A desk?
4. What do you like best about your room? What do you like least?
5. How do you want to change your room?
• Put old wallpaper and magazine scraps to good use by using them to create Recycled Paper Beads. This easy activity requires very few common materials and keeps kids very busy on rainy days. When they're finished, children can string their beads and give them as gifts or wear them for fun.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Top 10 tips for Parents

  1. A dedicated quiet space with good natural light or lighting is best for studying, with no distractions. If you have other children who are not studying for exams, make sure that they know the importance of revision time.
  2. Ensure that your son or daughter has one evening a week away from their studies. It’s also important that they take regular breaks during the study periods.
  3. Be around as a 'feeding station' – feed your child lots of healthy food and proper meals - not too many sugary snacks and junk food.
  4. Offer to help with testing or ask if there is something that you can do for them. Reassure them you are concerned about their welfare more than the results.
  5. Know your son or daughter's revision timetable. Encourage them to tell you about what they are studying. If you know that they are not at their best first thing in the morning, encourage them to rest then and work when they are more lively. They should choose their weakest/sleepiest time of day to be sociable and go out, or watch TV at those times.
  6. Know exactly the date, time and location for each exam and incorporate this into the revision plan. Make sure that they have the correct equipment they need for the exam (calculators, rulers etc). Know what they are not allowed to take in to the exam (mobile phones, pagers etc).
  7. If your son or daughter has a medical condition, for example diabetes or hayfever, make sure that the school knows about it. There are special considerations for some conditions.
  8. If there is a family crisis, for example divorce or bereavement, again ensure that your son or daughter's teacher knows about it, since the additional stress can affect your child's exam performance.
  9. Make sure that your child is using the internet to study and not as a resource to give the appearance of study!
  10. Tell them that they can only try their best and even if they don't do as well as you'd hoped, you still love them just as much and always try to -‘Be the best that you can be’.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Keep Kids Safe Online


Stay informed and get involved to make sure your child knows the risks, as well as the rewards, of the Internet. By Stephani Nola Walton






If your child is surfing the Web, you need to be paddling right alongside him — or at least observing him carefully from the shore. While the Internet offers goodies galore (educational materials, fun games and connections with people all over the world), it can also pose risks to your child's physical safety and emotional well-being.

Here's what appealing — and what's dangerous — about several popular ways kids use the Internet, along with suggested rules to keep them safe. The bottom line: Communicate with your child. Discuss what she's doing online and why. Set rules, and talk about them. Then keep talking, since your child can earn more rights and responsibilities as she grows. If she feels comfortable with these conversations, she will be more likely to let you know when she runs into an online bully or stumbles upon inappropriate content. Be a role model with your own Internet habits, since your child is likely to emulate your behavior.

Safety standards

1. Limit usage. Permit your child to have free online time for, say, 30 minutes right after school to instant-message friends, play games or visit social networking sites, but make it a rule that after meal, the computer is used for homework.

2. Keep kids in sight. Have the computer centrally located. Your child is less likely to browse questionable content if she knows Mom or Dad (or her brother or sister) might walk by at any second. This helps you monitor time spent online, chosen activities, and resultant behavior.

3. Do your homework. Check his browser history to know where your child goes online, and check the sites regularly. Use security tools and privacy features — whether offered by your browser or Internet service provider, or purchased separately — for extra protection. GetNetWise has more information about these safety features. Once installed, make sure these parental controls are really keeping him out of trouble (follow the instructions for your particular tool to learn how to use it best). Then follow up — by adjusting the settings on your safety filter, and by continuing to talk to your child about what's safe and acceptable.

Communicating and social networking

Online communication consists primarily of e-mail, instant messaging, chat rooms, and journals or Web logs (blogs). On networking sites such as MySpace.com, kids can create Web pages or profiles, and then invite others to view and become online buddies. Your child may use these media to share gossip, exchange photos, make weekend plans, find out about missed assignments, connect over common interests and express opinions. A quiet kid can showcase personality and develop communication skills. These activities offer a powerful sense of community, and the dedicated fan base gives kids a feeling of instant celebrity.

What to know: One out of every five kids gets sexual solicitations online. Strangers, predators and cyberbullies all target children, and their work is simplified when screen names reveal age, gender or home town. If posts aren't marked as private, personal information can be displayed to an unrestricted audience of readers. And even after you or your child removes once-public material, it is not necessarily gone. Parties and events can also be publicized, attracting inappropriate guests. On a less sinister note, IMing and blogging are prime distractions during homework hours. Finally, know that spam, spyware and viruses can use these channels to attack unprotected computers.

What to do:

- Know who your child talks to online. Review her buddy list: Does she really know everyone, or are some buddies "friends of friends"? Have her remove anyone whom she hasn't met in person.

- Tell him not to exchange personal information like a phone number, address, best friend's name or picture. No party invitations, revealing details or meeting in person — ever. Explain that almost any personal information can be useful to someone trying to figure out who he is or where he lives: the name of his piano teacher, school or the fact that he plays second base on a traveling baseball team. If he has a MySpace page or other online profile, check it regularly for inappropriate information.