Summer solutions:
Ideas for keeping the learning going during the summer
months
Summertime and the living is easy. That is unless you are
a parent trying to figure out how to occupy your children
over the long summer recess.If you are a working
parent, you likely have the nagging concern about who will
supervise your children and what they’ll be doing while
you are at work. For parents who are home with their
children, the concern can be how to motivate them to keep
active and involved.
Following are some
suggestions that families of elementary-age children have
used with success during the summer months to keep their
children supervised, active and learning.
[top]
At the
beginning of the summer, sit down with your children and
talk about the types of fun activities they would like
to do. Gather up summer arts and music schedules,
information about local sporting events, pamphlets about
local points of interest and day trips (all available at
local malls, supermarkets, libraries and chambers of
commerce) to jump start your discussion. If there is
preplanning involved, enlist your children’s help in
gathering necessary information, making reservations,
preparing lists and shopping for supplies.
Make
reading part of your children’s summer routine and try
making a trip to the library a regularly scheduled part
of your week. While at the library, find out what
exciting, enriching and free summertime opportunities
are available for your children.
Start
a summer scrapbook. At the beginning of the summer, give
children disposable cameras and notebooks for recording
information about summer activities (vacations, camp,
time spent with friends). Set aside a regular date (one
afternoon/evening each week) to create a page or two of
summer memories using their photos, text and any other
mementos they have collected. Inexpensive scrapbooks and
other supplies (stickers, colored paper, glue and other
adhesives, photo corners) are readily available at craft
and discount stores. Scrapbooking is a wonderful way to
help children preserve their own history, to express
themselves creatively and to practice such skills as
writing and drawing.
[top]
Keep
the learning going. Just because it’s summer doesn’t
mean learning has to stop. There are many local colleges
and service agencies that offer a wide variety of
programs for elementary students during the summer.
Academic enrichment programs range from sports camps or
outdoor adventures to journalism, music, art, computer
skills, science and math programs and more. For some
great summer academic enrichment programs, visit the
2005 Edition of "Summer Programs at New York Colleges
for Kids 8-18" online at
www.summeroncampus.com
or inquire at the local YMCA, Girls Incorporated, Boys
and Girls Clubs and other community agencies about the
types of summer programs they offer.
[top]
|