Homework time can be frustrating for both the child and the parents. Listed below are some tips to help homework be productive. Remember, homework is for the child…not the parent.

  • Make sure your child has a quiet, well lit place to do homework.
  • Make sure the materials your child needs, such as paper, pencils and a dictionary, are available.
  • Be positive about homework. Your attitude will rub off on your child.
  • When your child asks for help, provide guidance, not answers.
  • Help your child figure out what is hard homework and what is easy homework. Do the easy part first, for a feeling of accomplishment.
  • Keep breaks to a minimum to keep the flow going.
  • Start projects early and don’t wait until the night before they are due. The hardest part is getting started, so do at least one thing about the project the day it is assigned.
  • Study for tests over a period of several days.
  • Use a reward system for competed homework in a reasonable amount of time (ex. computer time, TV. time, doing something with Mom or Dad. Kids love having their parent’s attention).
  • Encourage your child to put all completed homework in folders and backpacks for easy access the next morning.

Remember, do not do their homework for them. If your child routinely requires your help to get the homework done, talk to his teacher.

Homework time can be frustrating for both the child and the parents. Listed below are some tips to help homework be productive. Remember, homework is for the child…not the parent.

  • Make sure your child has a quiet, well lit place to do homework.
  • Make sure the materials your child needs, such as paper, pencils and a dictionary, are available.
  • Be positive about homework. Your attitude will rub off on your child.
  • When your child asks for help, provide guidance, not answers.
  • Help your child figure out what is hard homework and what is easy homework. Do the easy part first, for a feeling of accomplishment.
  • Keep breaks to a minimum to keep the flow going.
  • Start projects early and don’t wait until the night before they are due. The hardest part is getting started, so do at least one thing about the project the day it is assigned.
  • Study for tests over a period of several days.
  • Use a reward system for competed homework in a reasonable amount of time (ex. computer time, TV. time, doing something with Mom or Dad. Kids love having their parent’s attention).
  • Encourage your child to put all completed homework in folders and backpacks for easy access the next morning.

Remember, do not do their homework for them. If your child routinely requires your help to get the homework done, talk to his teacher.

Recent Posts

Watkins’s Ideas About When To Start Kindergarten

It's probably the wrong time of year to be addressing this issue, but in recent weeks I've seen a lot of five and six year-olds getting ready to start Kindergarten. Most were very excited and I was excited for them too. Also anxious. I hope they have a great experience, a wonderful, memorable year, but, like their parents, there's always the worry that a bad first experience at 'real school' will color forever their attitude about school.

Watkins’s Ideas About Some of the Modeling We Do for Our Children

Ever wanted to be a model? You are one! Children learn, of course, from what we tell them, but so much more often, and more effectively, from how we act. I am sometimes asked how best to react when a child complains of vague and essentially non-worrisome complaints. Almost every parent hears these from time to time: stomach aches, leg pains, headaches, annoying itches or feelings of dizziness or light-headedness. All these complaints might be signs of serious illness, but more often they aren't and most of the time parents know this.

Watkins’ Ideas About Tummy Time

Work on those Abs! Disclaimer: I'm not sure if my partners will agree with me on this one, but they let me write what I like. Just don't assume they agree. In the late nineteen eighties, reports began to appear in the medical literature that Sudden Infant Death Syndrome was less common in infants that slept on their backs. This information was, at the time, mostly disregarded in the United States, as the long custom in this country was to have babies sleep on their tummies and logic seemed to suggest that that would be the safest position. Although we have known for a long time that regurgitation was not the cause of SIDS, the lack of a real answer left most of us thinking that better safe than sorry, don't risk choking, have babies sleep prone, on their tummies.

Post Categories

Social Media Links