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Conference moira::parenting

Title:Parenting
Notice:Previous PARENTING version at MOIRA::PARENTING_V3
Moderator:GEMEVN::FAIMANY
Created:Thu Apr 09 1992
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1292
Total number of notes:34837

350.0. "Looking for learning suggestions" by NETCUR::VASSIL () Fri Oct 09 1992 10:48

Hi,

I'm looking for suggestions to help a six year old get comfortable with 
learning in a school environment.

My son, Peter, is very timid and cautious until he gets comfortable.  As a 
result, he is reluctant to be verbal and try at school with academic 
activities (reading and math).  

So, for him to become comfortable with learning to read and math, I'm 
looking for "fun" ways to work with him at home.  For example, I set up a 
little store and priced things like 12 cents, 23 cents, so on and gave him 
a handful of change and we worked on math skills.  As a result, his papers 
started coming home much better.  

I'm sure this will get tiring soon and I would like to know if anyone can 
think of creative ways to keep math and reading fun while getting the 
concepts across.

Thanks,
Linda

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350.1some ideasTNPUBS::STEINHARTLauraFri Oct 09 1992 14:0425
    Why not include him in your daily activities like shopping and cooking?
    
    For example, I heard of a way to get kids to accept lower-sugar cereals
    without blaming Mom.  This also makes the children read numbers.  Take
    him to the food store and tell him he can only buy a cereal that is 12
    grams of sugar or less.  Tell him to read the boxes and figure it out. 
    
    For another exercise, have him help you read a recipe.  If you double
    or half the recipe, that makes even more work for his mathematics.
    
    He could count the change at the store to make sure it's the right
    amount.
    
    I think it is very important to read aloud to children and keep it fun. 
    If you get some interesting picture books with large type, he can
    follow along.  Just teaching him the habit of reading, and connecting
    it with pleasure and relaxation is very important.
    
    Maybe he needs to build up his social skills through group activity
    like softball, theater, cub scouts, or other groups that will get him
    to interact more with other children his age.  The confidence building
    might help him.
    
    L
    
350.2a few ideasCRONIC::ORTHFri Oct 09 1992 15:3151
    For reading:
    have a treasure hunt in you home (and/or outdoors). Make up little
    directions, like Go check under the bed, or Open the refrigerator door.
    Leave notes in each location directing to the next location. Some could
    be tougher. "Look under the tallest thing in the living room", or"open
    the 3rd drawer from the top on the left hand side of the desk". At the
    end, have a "treausre" of some sort. It might be a new pencil, or a
    small cookie, or a matchbox car, or whatever.
    
    send your child little notes. Just simple like "I really love you" or
    "I'm proud of you", or "I like being with you". Not only are they fun
    to read, but they'll make him feel good, too. And, who knows... someday
    you may find notes like that form *him*!
    
    
    For math:
    
    Have him measure the furniture. Really. Ask which things might fit
    where. Could the refrigerator fit into the bathroom? Can I put the
    couch along that wall? How many differnt things can fit into the same
    space as the couch takes up?  If it is feasible, you might want to let
    him "rearrange" his room, first on paper, and then actually help him do
    it, once he's sure everything will fit. He'll learn about how much
    space things take up, how much room he needs to walk between things,
    how much room it takes to open his closet door, etc.  Help him learn to
    estimate... "Do you think your dresser is wider than your bed?" Which
    is longer, the ______ or the _____?" Then check by actual measuring.
    
    
    Give your child the grocery ads from the paper. Tell him to find the
    cheapest thing on the page. The most expensive. Tell him to buy as many
    of any one thing as he can with $5. Then buy the fewest of any one item
    with $5. Help him plan a good meal for the family using "X" amount of
    dallars.  A variation is to give him a catalog and have him pick out
    clothes or toys or furniture or whatever, when only allowed to spend a
    certain amount of money. He may learn very quickly how very expensive
    stuff is today!
    
    Have him watch the odometer when you do errands. Have him estimate
    which route is shortest, then figure it out by actually clocking it.
    Have him make a map of the routes and places he travels regularly with
    the mileage written in (don't be too fussy about scale, but you might
    want to point out, if he doesn't "see" it that longer lines on the map
    would represent the longer distances.)
    
    
    
    I'm all thought out for the moment. If I think of more, I'll jot 'em in
    here.
    
    --dave--
350.3Keep them coming!NETCUR::VASSILSun Oct 11 1992 11:142
    Great suggestions!  Thanks, I hope to try them all.
    Linda
350.4cast diceSONATA::SPERAThu Oct 15 1992 14:519
    Throw dice and add up the numbers. After 3, 4, or 10 turns each, who
    has the higher score.
    
    Neither of my parents received much formal education. My mother, who
    can but doesn't read, asked my father, who does read, where he learned
    to read. His response was that he read the labels on boxes that he
    unloaded, read the words on trucks that went by, and read street signs.
    I was pretty impressed with his motivation, discipline, and
    accomplishment.
350.5JUNIOR MONOPOLYKUZZY::KOCZWARAFri Oct 16 1992 09:4324
We recently started playing Junior Monopoly with our son Kevin in the evening.
Kevin is 5 years old and in kindergarten. It's a great game in my opinion on
helping get basic math concepts across, adding subtracting and calculating 
money.  The game usually lasts about 45 minutes or so.  It's amazing how fast 
Kevin has caught on to handling some basic math concepts. He's learning such 
concepts as 2 + 2 = 4  and that 3 + 1 = 4 (unless you're in Congress! ;-) ).

Every Friday Kevin's kindergarten teacher sends home a news bulletin on what the 
his class did for the week as well as what they will be working on next week.
We usually spend some time working on the letter of the week, no more than 
15 - 30 minutes during the weekend. Looking for pictures in magazines, 
practicing printing the letter.  See if his teacher will send home a synopsis 
of what is planned for the next week on Friday.  I know Kevin has gained alot 
of confidence because he is prepared what what they are learning that week.

We also gave him a desk and chair, my husband's when he was a child. He loves
having a place of his own to work at. He has a coffee mug with his pencils and
pens and I buy him lots of colored paper. The desk is nothing fancy but he loves
the idea of being able to go off and "Work" like Mom and Dad.
 

Best of luck,

Patty