5 Things Parents Can Do to Help Their Children Succeed in School -- and Life
By Maria Chesley Fisk, Ph.D.
www.thinkparenting.com

Help your children take healthy, productive steps toward their 21st
century adult lives this school year.
Here are five things you can do to help your children learn and succeed
in their new classes and beyond:
1. Help your kids connect what they are learning in school
to the real world.
You can modify the suggestions below to match your child’s age and skill
level:
- Math. When at the checkout counter, let
your child figure out how much cash to pay and how much change
should be returned. Ask her to take into account the driving
time needed and tell you what time you need to leave for school or
an activity.
- English/Language arts. Look with your
child or point it out when you see spelling and vocabulary words in
magazines or on the web. Invite him to relax, snuggle, and
read with you. See suggestions for studying spelling words at
www.thinkparenting.com/parenting-resources.html
- Foreign Language. Spend time eating and
shopping in a community where the new language is spoken. Help
your child follow blogs and websites that interest her and are
written in the language. Rent movies or TV shows in the
language, familiar stories may be most comfortable for new learners.
- Science and Social Studies. See if there are museum exhibits or other places nearby you can visit to make this year’s content come alive. Look on the internet together for websites that connect to the science or social studies content and interest your child. Consider printing pages that he would like to reread.
2. Have high expectations and provide needed resources,
but don’t take over. If your children are intrinsically
motivated to learn, they are more likely to apply themselves and take
advantage of the resources around them. If they are motivated
primarily to please you or to earn rewards for grades, they are less
likely to really delve into the content and less likely to remember it
for long.
3. Remember that much our future adults need to know and
be able to do is taught at home. At home, kids learn and
practice crucial, practical life skills. These skills include
interpersonal, emotional, and communication skills; the inclination to
think deeply and creatively; and the ability to work with a team.
Abilities in these areas will surely be more valuable in the 21st
century than specific knowledge learned at school.
4. Instill in your children this belief: The harder
you work, the smarter you get. It’s true at school and
true for all your children are learning at home, including social and
emotional, practical, creative, and analytical skills. We are
constantly changing our brains. We strengthen neural connections
around what we learn and practice, and we lose neural connections we do
not use.
5. Teach your children to lead a cognitively healthy
lifestyle. People of all ages need adequate exercise and
sleep, a healthy diet, stimulating social connections, and new and
challenging activities that use our brains. A healthy, balanced
lifestyle will help your children perform better at school, feel better,
and establish habits that can last a lifetime.
Best wishes for year that stimulates, inspires, and prepares your
children for their 21st century lives!
About
the Author:
Dr. Maria Chesley Fisk is an educational consultant, speaker, and author
of Teach Your Kids to Think: Simple Tools You Can Use Every Day.
She is the mother of two boisterous boys and a former elementary
teacher, teacher trainer, and consultant to school leaders. For
more information on developing your child’s analytical, creative, social
& emotional, and practical intelligence, visit Dr. Fisk’s website
www.ThinkParenting.com.




