Help me out here: What should parents do to ensure their child’s success in school?

Help me out, folks.

I am speaking at Parents Palooza this weekend about how to ensure your child succeeds in school.  I am assuming most of the parents interested in this topic will have toddlers.

What is your advice? What do think parents need to do — or not do — to help their children do well in school?

I have my own list, but would love to hear from other folks.

Thanks, Maureen

96 comments Add your comment

Concernedmom30329

November 9th, 2012
9:03 am

Read to your children, read with your children, have them read to you.
Speak to your children often — not just when you are angry. Focus on vocabulary development from a young age — the sky is blue, the grass is green, lets count how many cookies,etc
Turn off the TV, computer etc.
memorize the math facts, even if that isn’t the current fad.
Arrange you and your spouse’s lives in such a way that someone is home for the evenings once your child is in school.
Don’t just ask about grades or are you passing, but rather what did you do today or what did you learn today.
Model good behavior at home and out. Respect others so your child will behave as you do. If you are rude, you can expect nothing different from your child…
Worry about raising a good citizen as much as you do a good person.
Make service a part of your family’s routine…
I could go on and on, but will stop with this one
Read.

Looking for the truth

November 9th, 2012
9:10 am

1. Do not believe everything your child tells you. They will do anything to make themselves look innocent. Teachers aren’t always right either, but having a conversation instead of a confrontation will allow for an amicable resolution. Not all teachers are in it for the money. Most actually do love teaching and working with kids.

2. On a related point, remember, the teacher may see a different side of your child than you do. Children who are darlings in church are still capable of misbehaving in class.

3. Set aside a quiet time and place for homework. Many teachers have rethought the whole homework question. If it’s assigned, it may be important.

4. Follow-up regularly with your child’s teachers, and use any technology (Parent Portals, etc.) to check on your child’s grades. While you only have one student in a particular class, that teacher may have beteween 25-40 students to worry about.

5. Attend parent conferences. If you’ve been invited, it’s because there is something important you need to hear. Ask for conferences if you see something that needs addressing. Teachers really do welcome you!

Digger

November 9th, 2012
9:11 am

Stop blaming race and take personal responsibility.

Freedom Education

November 9th, 2012
9:11 am

Parents need to choose the school for their children. Competition will insure the best schools survive and the bad schools close their doors. Parental choice with competition is the key.

Tired

November 9th, 2012
9:12 am

Encourage their interests. If they love to create, then get them art supplies. If they love to be outdoors, take them to the park and the river and talk about plants and birds and fishes. If they love the zoo, learn about animals together.

Looking for the truth

November 9th, 2012
9:12 am

One more point – if you’ve heard the same thing year after year from different teachers, think about what you could do differently. A child’s classroom behavior is directly impacted by your intervention or indifference.

Centrist

November 9th, 2012
9:13 am

The parents you will be speaking to at Parents Palooza are already doing it, and not the ones that need help in learning how to help their children.

Few children are self motivated. Some love to learn, but most need constant encouragement – and some in middle and high school need harsher incentives.

Teaching pre-schoolers (who are ready) how to count, recognize letters, sing the alphabet, love of books is a great start. Hard to do in single parent or two working parent households.

Parent interaction with their children’s school work is extremely important, along with knowing their teachers and possibly getting personally involved with the local PTA. Keeping up with their homework and schedule of tests/ projects until/if they get self motivated is also important. Some students need at least some of this extra parental effort right into college.

My guess is that most parents don’t/won’t do most of these things because it wasn’t done for them, and interferes with their crowded personal and work lives. Those parents will not be at the Palooza.

William Casey

November 9th, 2012
9:14 am

1. It all begins with parents understanding that their children are not clones of themselves. This enables parents to help children find THEIR best way of succeeding.

2. Parents must be willing to understand that their child is unique in very few ways. This enables parents to use the vast collective wisdom of their childrens’ teachers to their childrens’ advantage.

3. Pay attention to what’s going on in your childrens’ lives each and every day. It’s amazing how many parents neglect this fundamental. Ask lots of questions about everything.

4. Allow children to make mistakes… up to a point.

I could go on forever but will quit there for now.

Homeschool Mom

November 9th, 2012
9:21 am

Homeschool them!

M.E.

November 9th, 2012
9:35 am

Both the school administration and parents need to be on the same page that this is a team effort between them and the children to help them succeed. Take kids to conferences and keep them informed when teachers and parents are talking to each other. Pass on compliments to teachers, parents, and kids. Keep the goal in sight, which is a responsible, well-educated child who knows how to work on goals and understands that they are a valuable part of the whole.

indigo

November 9th, 2012
9:35 am

Encourage your children to do as well as possible without browbeating them. Follow their progress closely. Be realistic. If they aren’t college material, steer them into a good trade school or the Military.

If your child is not a star student or star athlete but just plain jane, accept it. Remember, you can’t make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear.

Nahs dad

November 9th, 2012
9:37 am

Maureen , I recommend that the parents of the toddlers read a book called, “The Price of Privledge.”

The book addresses the current culture of helicopter parenting, and the corresponding damage done to kids as they become teenagers, college students and twenty something’s.

The book is written in a way that arrived upon theses are supported in academic studies with supportable statistical analysis.

A great read – I only wish I had read the book sooner.

Brit

November 9th, 2012
9:39 am

Read to them every day.
Listen to them.
Accept their strengths and weaknesses

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
9:44 am

Take them to the old part of Fernbank. :-) The new part is just a for-lease corporate party-pad. The old part has minerals and rocks, and planetarium (projected constellations) and observatory (big outdoor telescope). The place has a lot of structured knowledge although “astrophysics” may not be a popular theme in Atlanta. The glare of the city lights makes the observatory pretty useless, but they still make it work. This https://mcdonaldobservatory.org/visitors/programs/star-parties versus this http://fsc.fernbank.edu/observatory.htm

#1 thing to develop kids: no television. (adjust and limit)(viewer discretion advised) TV is passive, turns the mind to mush, very different from reading and doing, making things. I have noticed that in the U.S., people who watch a lot of tv tend to be very judgemental towards other people.

sloboffthestreet

November 9th, 2012
9:45 am

Everything your child needs to know, be certain you teach them yourself. No one in the public school system will. They do like to take credit for teaching children who already know the answers though. But never assume you have delivered a student to the Highly Qualified that is ready to learn. The learning stops the day you stop teaching them. The teachers, schools, administrators and Boards of Education are simply there for decoration. Nothing more. Enter public education with very low expectations and you will never be disappointed. Tell them that Maureen.

Poor teachers, as if Common Core and performance vs salary wasn’t bad enough now they have Charter Schools to compete with. And they collectively don’t have a clue why all this is happening? It’s so so unfair. Boo Hoo, baby. Boo Hoo!!

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
9:48 am

In Los Angeles they have Griffith Park, in Atlanta the planetarium is at Fernbank. The two places are really sister facilities, same concept, public telescope and planetarium. Here’s the Griffith Park scene from the James Dean movie Rebel Without a Cause. http://www.myspace.com/video/elisabeth/rebel-without-a-cause-planetarium-scene/30901047

Old timer

November 9th, 2012
9:49 am

Sit down for dinner most nights. Do not over schedule them.

Pride and Joy

November 9th, 2012
10:04 am

Read to them often with enthusiasm. They need to understand that when you can read you can unlock the joys of a good story.
Read youself. Let them see you enjoying reading.
Go to work promptly. Let them witness you making working and being on time to work be a priority in life. They will translate that to the importance of being on time to school.
Play with them. Get down on the floor and play with whatever they want to play with. Showing them that you care about them will boost their self-esteem and confidence in themselves.

The Dixie Diarist

November 9th, 2012
10:06 am

The one thing parents can teach their kids is manners.

Teachers are there for the undeniable academic pleasures of advanced placement trigonometry, and we teach manners, too, when we can work it in, and we do work it the heck in, but manners are the ultimate domain of parents, and even grandparents.

So when a kid has bad manners, I deal with the kid’s bad manners right then and there, but silently blame the parents for wasting my time, the time of the other kids in class, and their own kid’s time.

http://www.adixiediary.com

Teacher

November 9th, 2012
10:06 am

Reading needs to be part of the family lifestyle. As a teacher, it is obvious which kids come from families where reading is valued.

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
10:07 am

errata: the actor hiding under the seats in the Rebel Without a Cause movie scene died in the hills close to the Griffith Park facility. It seems that is real life, this location / area was their refuge. Which brings to mind to concept of “TAZ” “temporary autonomous zone.” Probably every kid has a safe place to call their own, it could be anywhere. In the early “Our Gang” series, the boys had their little shack, the “He-Man Woman Hater’s Club.” There was not too much woman hatin’ going on but the boys could puff up their chests and say things away from mother. Aside from the misogynist language, it’s good example that kids need to be able to do some “plotting and planning.” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wBIC8JTQMMQ

FBT

November 9th, 2012
10:11 am

Every child should spend an hour a day outside.

catlady

November 9th, 2012
10:14 am

Let your child fail (unless he will die from the failure).

Be interested/a part of in HIS/HER life, appropriately by age. At all times until college, KNOW HIS/HER friends.

Peer-proof your child. Teach them to not grant authority to their friends.

Remember, parenthood is FOREVER. Keep the big picture in mind.

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
10:15 am

In the Steinbeck short story book “Pastures of Heaven” the local teacher eccentric has the neighborhood kids in his yard performing Shakespeare plays. One of the kids has bare feet and raggedy clothes. At the schoolhouse the adults get together and give the kid a pair of shoes and some clothes. The dad is so embarrassed that he packs up (with his son) and goes to the big city to be an accountant.

Mom of successfull public shhool graduate

November 9th, 2012
10:26 am

Get a library card – and use it. Don’t worry about what books your child chooses, as long as they are reading.
When your child does not do as well in school as you think they should – ask the teacher what you (and the child) need to do – don’t imply the teacher was wrong.
No TV/Cable during the week, limited TV on weekends.
Ignore pressures for electronic games – even “educational” games – they suck up time, attention, and offer little value. Most video games turn kids into rude monsters who tune everything, and everyone, out.
Encourage outside play.
When grocery shopping with toddlers, discuss what you see (colors, numbers, items, what they taste like). Ask older children to compare prices and keep a running tally of the bill (use estimating techniques).
Developmental toys for toddlers don’t need to be expensive – for example plastic food containers are fun to sort, stack, and fill and empty with sand and water.
Take the kids on hikes, even if they complain. Take time to watch bugs, frogs, tadpoles.
When traveling, stop at every state line welcome center – there are exhibits of local features, brochures and free maps. When traveling by car, let the kids navigate using the map. (Ask the navigator “are we there yet” – and how many more miles/hours to go)
Take vacations to state and national parks, battlefield sites, wildlife areas, historic sites, museums – the cost is much less than visits to theme parks, most have excellent educational displays. Atlanta is unusually rich with everything from the Chattahoochee National Recreation Area to the Capitol Building to the Carter Center to battlefield sites. There is a reason Disney spends so much money on advertising.

Atlanta Mom

November 9th, 2012
10:28 am

Have high expectations for your children, so they can live up to them (because they will live down to your low expectations).
Never bad mouth the child’s teacher, no matter what you think. It’s sort of like parenting, you must present a united front.
And the evening meal together. So important in so many ways. They learn to converse, agreeably disagree and hopefully how to present a cogent argument.

A reader

November 9th, 2012
10:29 am

Be involved in your child’s homework but do not do the homework. In elementary school review with them what homework is required everyday and help them schedule the time to do the homework. Review their homework everyday. Allow older children to manage their own homework load, but ask what subject they have everyday. Offer to help your child study for tests. In general, be involved with your child’s school work.

All children have academic strengths and weaknesses. Encourage their strengths. Work with your child and their teacher to overcome their weaknesses.

All children have non-academic strengths and interests. Encourage those interests.

Allow your child to face the consequences of not doing homework or not studying for a test. Allow older children to be their own advocate with the teachers.

Start talking about college early. Once your child is in high school, start to actively discuss which college they would like to go to and what types of degrees they are interested in. If college is not the best fit for your child, then discuss other options including technical/trade school and the military. Your child should enter their senior year with a good idea of what they plan to do once they graduate.

Kate

November 9th, 2012
10:30 am

If this audience is primarily young parents, read, read and read. Explore books in a variety of topics to suit the children’s interests. When my son was in kindergarten, I think he checked out every book the library had on snakes, reptiles, and dinosaurs. Not my thing, but he was reading! As he got older, he was intrigued by fact books and other non-fiction. Now in college, he’s still a fan of non-fiction, history, and biographies.

Woody

November 9th, 2012
10:36 am

1. Make sure there is some kind of information flow to you. That means, always listening and taking in what is heard, but not reacting right away to what is said. Protect your sources. Don’t freak out.

2. School is stressful for your child. Let him/her relax and blow off a little steam when they come home.

3. Limit TV. I’m on the fence about video games – they teach peristence, and recovery from failure. But they can become addicting, and should not get in the way of doing schoolwork that has been assigned.

4. For younger children, be near when they do take-home schoolwork, so that the experience is not isolating and (therefore) punishing for them. Wean them later on.

5. Later on, cellphone definitely on the shelf during study time. Computer screen always visible to you.

6. Encourage your child to start a study group(s) during high school years. This is a success factor in college.

7. Trust, but verify.

8. Don’t browbeat your children or drive them. Let the expectation that they will be working for A’s, linger heavily, but unspoken, in the air. Praise and celebrate when they get them. Commiserate emotionally with lower grades (”I know you really wish that was a better grade”) but don’t encourage excuses. If child makes a D or F, you as a parent have definitely not been present enough in your child’s life, and you need to find out what is really going on.

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
10:41 am

Good point about “Get a library card and use it.”

Claudia Stucke

November 9th, 2012
10:53 am

Amen to Woody and to Looking for the Truth, as well as to Private Citizen’s suggestion to take kids to Fernbank Science Center. My kids both graduated from college with honors, which they did through their own efforts; but they grew up on a house with lots of books, computer access, and frequent trips to Fernbank Science Center from the time they were in strollers.

I would add a couple of things, though: It takes a village. You’re not raising your children in a vacuum. Invite their friends over, especially those kids who don’t have access to the Internet (yes, there are still plenty of kids whose parents either can’t afford or have chosen not to have computer and/or Internet access)–and take time to monitor activities as well as to put parent controls on kids’ access to sites. (When he or she is assigned a group project, invite the other members of the group over, and supervise as necessary–but don’t micro-manage! Let and encourage them to do their own work. Also, something as seemingly mundane as a trip to the DeKalb Farmers Market can have an impact, especially if you make it a regular part of your week. Our children need to know that the world is a diverse, interesting place; that English is not the only language spoken; and that not everyone looks just like them. In fact, most of the world does not.

JT

November 9th, 2012
10:53 am

1. Start teaching your kids as early as possible and work on the basics (letters, numbers, colors, shapes, recognizing their name when it’s written down, etc.) BEFORE they get to pre-K or kindergarten. If your kids master the basics, they’ll be WAY ahead of the game.

2. Limit what the kids watch on TV. If the kids want to watch TV, make sure it has some educational value and is age-appropriate.

3. Establish priorities with your kids regarding school work (ie. school comes before fun/play, period) and don’t over-schedule them with extra-curriculars.

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
10:55 am

Once upon a time the Decatur public library had a room with framed paintings / prints hanging on the wall with a little checkout card sleeve glued on back or the prints. A person could check out paintings and take them home and hang them on the wall. It was a simpler time before the advent of video and digital/ “technology.” This was even before if you wanted to store a computer program, you carried around a shoebox of punch cards that was put through a card reader machine that was about the size of a Volkswagen. Air was blown through the punch outs on the cards which were read by a sensor grid. Yes, from back when you could check out full size framed painting prints at the library… same era… http://www.computermuseum.li/Testpage/IBM1402-PunchCardReader.jpg

concerned

November 9th, 2012
10:57 am

1. Read, read, and read some more. The more vocabulary, understanding, and love of reading a child has the better they will do in all subjects.
2. Provide a quiet place to study and sleep.
3. Just because a teacher does not assign homework doesn’t mean a child should do nothing academic related at home. Talk about science, math, and other interesting subjects with your child. Find their interests and enroll them in camps or classes based on their interests. Buy books and DVDs related to their academic interests.
4. Make sure they get plenty of sleep and good nutrious meals. Sleepy and hungry children do not do well in school.
5. Have your child’s eyes and hearing checked regularly. Your child will not do well if they can’t see or hear well.
6. Teach your child to be respectful of EVERYONE, no matter what. Just because you disagree with the views of others does not mean you have to be disrespectful towards them.
7. Stay on top of all assignments. Teachers ALWAYS give a student plenty of time to complete projects and book reports. Before you yell at the teacher find out from your child when the assignment was given. Teachers should not have to accept late work, but they will.
8. Never use the excuse, “I just don’t have time to work/read/play with my child.” You have just as much time in your day as everyone else. Your child is IMPORTANT and needs YOU.
9. Turn off the T.V.! Turn off the computer! Turn off your cell phone! Spend the time you would normally watching T.V./playing on the computer/or texting with your child. Playing cards and board games teaches children numerous skills.
10. Talk to your child everyday and do not give into their every demand. No is not a bad work. Stick to your word.

mother of 2

November 9th, 2012
11:00 am

Some great comments here! I don’t have toddlers – I have one in high school and one in college and both are good students. I read to my kids long after they were independent readers. Fostering a love of learning is key. I also let them fail. When they were frustrated with teachers or peers, I always asked them to think about how they contributed to the problem and thing about ways to correct or prevent the problem in the future. My older child went to private school and my younger child is in public school. Find the best fit for your child and encourage him/her to do his/her best.

catlady

November 9th, 2012
11:03 am

NEVER, EVER LET YOUR CHILD OR THE TEACHER HEAR YOU SAY, “I CAN’T_________ BECAUSE I WORK” We ALL work, honey.

Your kids are more important than who you are dating, or just about anything else on Earth. Step up! Take responsibility!

Gifted Chem Teacher

November 9th, 2012
11:07 am

Read to your children, encourage their curiousity and give them real, appropriate answers to their questions. If you don’t know the answer – find out together. Let them use their imaginations and let them be children.

Ron F.

November 9th, 2012
11:16 am

Read to them, have plenty of picture books and let them choose often. Turn down the volume on TV and radio in the car. They need to learn to play and work in less noisy environments. Play soft and/or classical music at bedtime to help them relax. Let them see you read printed material or Kindle. Reinforce colors, shapes, and simple math. I went around the house and taped a letter from the alphabet that was the starting letter for the thing it was taped to (C for Chair, T for television, etc.) to help them learn letters and sounds.

I drew funny looking cats on white paper (2 circles with triangles for ears and lines for whiskers and tails) and we would color and count them and post them on the wall with the number. We had pictures printed on my computer posted on the wall and each boy would pick one and we would “find” the letter for the starting sound from a bucket of letters. Anything that gets kids interested in learning early basic reading and math that’s interactive is great. Some computer/electronic game stuff is okay, but limit it because it gets addictive. I didn’t have money for the fancy electronic stuff when mine were little being the only parent for two boys, so we made things together. Mine don’t remember the computer games, but they remember the cat pictures I drew for counting and the Christmas ornaments we cut out of cardboard and covered in glitter and all manner of stuff. They remember them because we did them together and talked about the math and reading skills they needed to learn. When learning is part of family closeness and security, it is more positively associated and the kids are more successful.
Eat balanced meals, and go OUTSIDE and PLAY with your kids as often as you can. They need YOU along with the educational “stuff” you might do. Play with them, talk with them, and do silly things like imagining what clouds look like or making up stories. That gives them security and stability, which go a long way in helping a kid learn.

blue moon

November 9th, 2012
11:33 am

If you didn’t have good parents, try to find some older parents you respect and ask them to mentor you.

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
11:45 am

Not sure if this can fit the Parent Palooza talk, but I think kid toys that require engagement assembly are very healthy. Even something as simple in concept as a table top puzzle (as opposed to a computer game) required holding pieces, observing patterns, grouping colors, and dealing with the little bent edges and such when fitting together pieces. Water color kits and paper, learning the basics of painting: pencil, then pen and ink, then filling in with color. I seem to recall getting official “Tinker Toy” award, mailed from the company, when I was five years old. These were simple and low cost assembly toys with wooden center cogs and colorful wooden dowel sticks. Looks like it made of plastic now and has extra little pieces. http://www.walmart.com/ip/Tinkertoy-102-Piece-Jumbo-Set/5030825 This stuff used to be made of wood, was very simple and hearty. Similarly, Erector Set used to be very hearty and basic, as shown here: http://www.vintagetoysillustrated.com/vintagetoy/forsale/october/2009/GILBERT_ERECTOR_SET_SEVEN_ONE_HALF_ENGINEER_SET_BOX_GIRDERS.JPG

Looking around today, many of these assembly / building toys have been changed to limited themes: “Robot Kit” etc. They used to be open ended. There has really been a change in the concept of these assembly toys. Probably the original inspiration people are dead and gone and the soulless corporate borg has taken over. Guy told me yesterday how kid’s toys are expensive now, lots of stuff at Toy-R-Us for $100. and up. Seems a lot of things in the USA have changed as far as supplying toys for kids. They’ve gotten expensive with limited conceptual freedom. Obviously a good market out there for someone who wants to go into the toy business. I’ve before thought of making wooden toys, like Santa Clause, just because it doesn’t seem like there are many available. So much now is air puff plastic assembled off shore and sold in US with heavy marketing and high price (so to speak).

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
11:52 am

Original concept Tinker Toys were wood and there were two parts, the cogs and the sticks and that was it.http://img1.etsystatic.com/000/0/6336624/il_fullxfull.264176565.jpg Someone probably figured that the wood sticks were dangerous. Maybe not.

Found this on the biography page pdf of a female lawyer, Karen Layng, “Not much interested in dolls, Layng liked playing with trucks. And the cranes she built out of Tinker Toys could be found on all the furniture throughout the house.”

bootney farnsworth

November 9th, 2012
11:54 am

1) read to your kids
2) read to your kids
3) read to your kids – but read appropriate subject matter, not People or US Weekly. Newberry has a huge collection of excellent childrens books which appeal to kids regardless of race, income, ect.
4) turn off the TV
5) turn off the TV
6) turn off the TV-even Big Bird gets old after awhile
7) talk to your kids
8) talk to your kids
9) talk to your kids – and actually listen

10) take the racial chip off your shoulder. basic math is basic math from asia to africa.
11) take the racial chip off your shoulder. good grammar is not passing, it is the pathway to a better life. if Obama can string together proper sentence structure when appropriate, so can you.
12) know who your kids friends really are. encourage them to associate with people of good character and serious about their studies.
13) know who your kids teachers are. this means regular meetings and listening to them.
14) be involved in your childrens school. it silently reinforces you care about and value education.
15) don’t act deliberately ignorant in front of your kids.
16) turn off the TV yourself and read a book.
17) visit the local museum.
18) accept your child is not the center of the universe, and that they may actually have misbehaved or not done their homework.
19) place education over athletics. sports is not the way out of poverty except for the very, very, very few, and for most of them they sink back into poverty once their playing days are over.
20) encourage the arts. countless studies have shown the direct and positive effect an arts education has on STEM learning.
21) visit the library
22) visit an art gallery
23) do NOT let your current boy/girl friend move in. unless they are willing to part with a ring, they do not care for your kids as much as you do and will drain time and resources
24) if single, stop having babies!

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
11:55 am

report: original Tinker Toys image. http://www.http://img1.etsystatic.com/000/0/6336624/il_fullxfull.264176565.jpg

original ad and pricing: http://www.3ds.com/blog/draftsight/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/tinker-toy-construction-toys.gif

I do not think kids can get these today. The new ones are plastic and have additional small pieces seemingly unrelated to main concept.

bootney farnsworth

November 9th, 2012
11:55 am

oh, and tell them you are proud of them when they do good.

Hillbilly D

November 9th, 2012
11:55 am

Teach them manners, respect for others, that the world doesn’t revolve around them and that they have to suffer the consequences, when they fail to do these things. My Daddy summed it up to us this way, “Even if you can’t do the work, you can still sit there, behave and keep your mouth shut”.

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
11:55 am

typo. should say “repost”

Jacob

November 9th, 2012
12:00 pm

Read to your child.
Discipline your child according to their actions.
Simply talk to your child, allowing them to come into contact with different vocabulary.
Help your child with any homework they may have.
Show your child you care about them.
Model reading, by reading on your own and having literature around the house (magazines, newspapers, books, etc).

mountain man

November 9th, 2012
12:12 pm

Get your children to school EVERY DAY and ON TIME.

If you have been called to your child’s school on a discipline issue – GO, and keep an open mind. Your little angel at home may be a real devil at school.

Tell your kids about why education is important – that high school graduates are much more likely to get and keep a job and make more than dropouts, and college graduates are even better.

Be a parent.

Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft

November 9th, 2012
12:17 pm

As a high school teacher I have learned a lot from my students. My advice for parents:

1. Do NOT do your kids homework for them.

2. Let them fail. I know it is hard to watch that, but if you constantly bail them out, they will never change their behaviors.

3. Do not tell (or at least don’t constantly remind) them that they have a learning disability, ADHD or any other ‘disorder’. They will define themselves by this and work it to the very end. Instead, help them develop strategies that will enable them to focus and give them confidence. On the same note, do not tell your child he/she is brilliant either.

4. Please, please, please, trust their teachers. If you have a reason not to, don’t tell your child. Report it to the administration and deal with it among adults. Kids LOVE drama. Don’t feed that desire in ways that will negatively impact their learning.

5. Keep your eye on which kids they are hanging around. There are absolutely losers out there who will bring others down.

6. Monitor what they are doing on the computer. I can’t count how many parents would tell me that their child was “in his/her room for six hours writing a paper”. I guarantee that five of those hours were spent surfing the net, chatting on facebook, and playing games.

7. The best student I ever taught was not brilliant; she was curious and loved to learn. When she graduated, I asked her what drove her to work so hard and to love learning so much. She told me that every single evening, she and her mom would sit down and talk for an hour. I doubt many parents think they can find the time to do that, but I am certainly going to try.

8. Place the focus on learning rather than grades. Placing too much pressure on kids often forces the to shut down.

9. Kids need sleep…at least 8 hours.

10. Monitor what foods they eat and how they react to them.

11. Get them involved in extra-curriculars, and make them stick with them. Sports, arts, whatever. And if they ‘don’t like it’, don’t give in. Challenges are good!

I guess this applies to older kids, but establishing good habits early will help!

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
12:18 pm

I’ve got neighbor kids who shoot guns and ride gas powered “four wheelers” and that’s about it. No assembly toys and the parents are completely paranoid about any kind of knowledge or art from the outside world. I asked the one kid, about age 10, what he had been doing and he said he goes online and plays games against other people (peer group). So they have their own little world going via internet and are “live online” in community when they play their game. Looks like there is a lot of talk, community and information sharing going on in the chat box. i think this is his window to the outside world. i gave him some kid books a while back, sort of things I had read at his age but I do think he engaged with it. The parents do not read, The household has no books. It’s weird, uphill battle for contemporary knowledge.

Maybe he’ll grow up and be like “FPS Russian” who is really some guy in Georgia. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLFYvG6MsZU

Giving an education talk in Georgia? Whew. Good luck with that.

Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft

November 9th, 2012
12:18 pm

…And teach INTEGRITY.

Rick L in ATL

November 9th, 2012
12:21 pm

To us the real question was: how can we make sure the public school is doing the best it can do? (We always knew we’d handle our business on the home end). And our approach was: be as polite as possible but as forceful as necessary. Understand that a lot of what principals and even teachers do is to tell you what a great job they are doing, but you must evaluate with your own eyes and ears.

Be a regular presence in the building. Volunteer, serve on a committee. Get your body in that building on a regular basis.

Ask your child’s teacher what they need that they haven’t been able to get from the central office, then figure out how to make it happen. (We built fixtures, bought furniture and appliances and installed them, etc.) (All of this was specifically not permitted by APS, by the way, but we did it anyway).

You’ll meet some fantastic teachers. Even as I rant incessantly about the lazy inefficient bureaucrats up and down APS with their mail-order degrees and limitless contempt for parents, I’m still constantly amazed by the dedication of most teachers we’ve met. Remember–when parents like me rail for more vouchers, more control, more charters–we want to bring you with us. Great teachers will be more valued and appreciated than ever in our new world order. Bad teachers will be doing something else.

MomG

November 9th, 2012
12:23 pm

Let them fail – in lots of little ways, and early. Be there is your child has questions, but LET THEM keep up with their homework, do the work, bring the book home they need – and if they forget, let them suffer the consequences. They earlier they fail on the little things, the earlier they will take responsibility. Then they can take pride in their accomplishments and organization – because they, not you, are responsible for their success. It’s the hardest lesson I’ve learned, but my kids, their school, and I am the better for it.

lovelyliz

November 9th, 2012
12:29 pm

From a former student and a former teacher:

1. Set a good example. If your children see you reading, see your intellectual curiosity they will be inclined to do better in school. We know that students raised in an abusive home will have problems, but kids from “good” who never see their parents pick up a book or ask questions about anything, who are more interested in what’s on the latest reality show than helping with the homework even if they don’t fully understand it themselves will raise children who will be relatively brain-dead in school.

2. Listen and pay attention.Asking straight up questions may not help with the reality of what your child is doing in school and out, on what they’re feeling on the inside and may not be obvious but can really impact how well they do academically

Beverly Fraud

November 9th, 2012
12:32 pm

Do something that not a SINGLE Republican in the state (are you out there Fran Millar and Edward Lindsey?) is willing to do:

Put the onus of learning on the CHILD (a saying of Dr. Trotter of MACE)

Partisan shot? Of course not. We know the Democrats are spineless, do gooder bedwetters; Neal Boortz tells us so; who knew, when it comes to education, Millar, Lindsey, et. al. are EXACTLY the same?

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
12:38 pm

“FPS Russia,” the “Georgia Arnold Schwartzenegger / James Bond.” What a cad that guy is with his faux accent. How to appeal to this type person for “education?” Probably through engineering or small business accounting? or construction trades. (?) maybe machining or law.

k teacher

November 9th, 2012
12:45 pm

Doesn’t really matter how much you prepare your children. If their teacher has one or two discipline problems or special needs students who are being mainstreamed due to IDEA, IEPs, FAPE and Inclusion, those students are going to get the bulk of the attention and help while everything is dumbed down and the teacher is whiling away doing bushels of paperwork. The regular ed parents have let the special ed parents take over everything .. the squeaky wheel gets the attention. It’s only November and there are RTIs and SSTs galore – with paperwork to match – that takes away any planning time or extension work to accelerate those who actually know some things.

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
1:01 pm

Public art fairs for children are a good thing, where the family can go and the kids paint and make things. As a kid I did this and we had a brick of soft clay to cut on and then it was sun dried. (minimal expense, maximum “heft.”) Thanks to whoever put that together and I think there was no fee.

Private Citizen

November 9th, 2012
1:11 pm

k treacher the special ed coordinators tell me it takes hours and hours to meet the legal “paperwork” data base filing for one child. And then the database is available only to the special ed. staff and not the teachers. The teachers are a piece of paperwork or two from the sped. staff with a description of what is going on with the child. Teachers are denied a lot of information about these kids. I had one high school student who was really dangerous under certain circumstances and I didn’t find out until he attacked someone. Turns out he had a history of this sort of thing, you know? -like holding another smaller down on the floor and trying to strangle them? and I was not even informed of it or the conditions that “triggered” this behavior. I don’t mind having such a kid in the classroom, but the sped. industry has built a little wall around itself to the point of being unprofessional and not informing teachers fully, and sequestering the data where teachers can not access it. It’s messed up. I’ve also been at a meeting where a sped director from the district basically openly threatened everybody with federal law if they didn’t follow the sped accommodations to the letter. That person is now some super-director of something and having enough power, seems to have chilled out some and is no longer threatening people. The sped. thing where they’ve got the database and the teacher doesn’t is pretty messed up.

Anotther comment

November 9th, 2012
1:24 pm

Teach your children to read before they start school. You can still buy the “Dick and Jane” books that the nuns taught us to read in during the 1960’s. I learned how to read by myself at age 3, reading the News Paper. I have read the news paper for 48 straight years. I had Tea with Daddy and read the Courier Express with him. My mother didn’t believe it. I was upset when my kids weren’t spontaneous readers like me. So I bought the Dick and Jane Readers and taught them that way. We really need to just get rid of all the crap theories from 1980-present and go pack to the 60’s and 70’s when students learned. Schools had shop and business classes. The really big thing we did not have to deal with all the special Ed students and discipline problems disrupting classes. We had classes separated on intelligence. My own sister and I were with the smart kids we are smart.mmy other sister and brother were with the dumb kids, they are stupid.

I also taught my children multiplication tables to 12. The only way to do that is to hand write it out and drill it.

I taught my children how to write in cursive in the third grade, public school waits too long.

I made sure that my children could count to 100 before they went to kindergarden. They also knew their colors and shapes.

if a parent can not do these simple things, they should not be a parent. I was a single parent during most of this time working 60 hrs a week.

So if you are not prepared to do this for your child, use birth control, if that fails have an abortion or put the baby up for adoption to a family that will.

Be an advocate for learning

November 9th, 2012
1:56 pm

And that includes you, the parent! I learned the hard way how to approach the teachers and administrators effectively about my concerns. It is important to meet with the teacher and principal in person, as phone calls, emails, and notes just do not replace face-to-face interaction.

Year by year I got tidbits from other parents and grew both more courageous and more effective. When my daughter was finally tested for a gifted program, the administrator told me it was clear from her records that she had qualified years earlier in another state!

Top School

November 9th, 2012
2:03 pm

Not every child has the desire or interest to learn. Just as …not every child has the desire or interest to play a sport or musical instrument.

The desire for learning comes from within…when the student is ready…a teacher will appear.

Some of the most deprived people have obtained great success regardless of their circumstances.

Stories of walking miles to a school, a history of limited books and reading by candle light.

The difference in today’s world and the opportunities available before…

PARENTS AND PUBLIC/PRIVATE SCHOOLS have the opportunity and resources to lay a smorgasbord of CHOICES at the GOURMET BUFFET of Education.

Parents/ and good schools should spend more time observing and feeding the individual natural gifts of their children. Less time needs to be given to trying to manipulate a child to fit into a education system that does not feed them naturally.

GIVE YOUR CHILD EXPOSURE…AND CHOICE…AND STAND BACK to watch what the CHOOSE.

Exposing a child to many many many choices…will help their gifts appear. The most difficult job of the parent … leaving “their” choice out of the picture. Any manipulation or attempt to make a child into something he/she is not….will only create more problems as the mature.

Parents need to learn to … Watch…feed…lead…and know when to get out of the way.
Regardless…a child with determination and the GOD GIVEN desire …without parents or mentors…will find the resources and teachers with or without the opportunities.

Schools…good parents…make it easier for a child to SUCCEED …but amazingly…some of the best come from some of the worst struggling experiences.

Every experience inside and outside of the school house is an opportunity to figure out YOUR CHILD’S GIFT to the world.

When the student is ready…the teacher will appear.
And there will be no stopping the student.

Top School

November 9th, 2012
2:20 pm

When I think about learning….and frustrations of teaching/ parenting …and trying to figure out what to do…

I always refer back to stories about Helen Keller… Thomas Edison…( teachers told his mother he could not be educated ) Frederick Douglass ( As told in his autobiography, Douglass succeeded in learning to read from white children in the neighborhood and by observing the writings of men with whom he worked. Mrs. Auld one day saw Douglass reading a newspaper; she ran over to him and snatched it from him, with a face that said education and slavery were incompatible with each other.)

Most children today…with access to a computer… have opportunities within reach of a keyboard well beyond anything our past generations could ever imagine.

The only problem for parents and schools… NOW…with so much to choose FROM…what will they choose?

WATCHING THEM CHOOSE…GUIDING THAT CHOICE…AND STAYING OUT OF the manipulation of the CHOICE…is the most difficult choice a parent and the school has to make.
Not ALL children want to choose the school’s norm of the education process.
Parents involved need to know the difference.

Frankie

November 9th, 2012
2:37 pm

Homeschool is not necessarily the answer. i have seen some really uneducated kids come from homeschooling. you have to remember who is teaching them.

My formula has been to show my children by example.
I read, i went back to schol to get my masters
I talk to them about everything and if they do not know anything about it i make them resarch it.
we talk about what happens to kids who throw away their education,, scholarship etc.
My 2 year old reads and talks better than most in her class, or older kid in her daycare for that matter.
I have had parents come to me and ask how did yu get her to speak so well so early.
my wife and i TALk in front of her, we TALK to her, over and over again.
we provide her with dvds that TALK to her. that reinforces sound, sight, etc..

I have one child with a FULL SCHOLARSHIP, another daughter about to graudate highschool with a full scholarship, a son who struggles with math but speaks well, is respectful and knows who he is.
And my 2 year old will probably out do them all when she gets to college.
No pressure just started early and oftern..repetition, repetition
Life is a lesson in itself. we go grocery shopping they know exactly how much change they are supposed to gt be back without looking at the cash register….repetition….

Top School

November 9th, 2012
2:38 pm

So much reflection on this blog about the good old days…
YOU HAVE A KEYBOARD in front of you…ACCESS TO THE ENTIRE WORLD…
YOU CAN VISIT ANY MUSEUM WITH THE TOUCH OF A KEY.

My God! …so much information and a screen with 3D effects to expose you to worlds beyond the imagination of less than 20 years ago … This generation of children have access to information my generation ( those of us over 40 ) never thought imaginable.

YET, OUR SCHOOLS ARE STILL ATTEMPTING TO TEACH in the same manner we were taught.

More food…and still starving people…more information …easier access to it and still a lack of learning.
IT IS ALL ABOUT CHANGE people…
Change the methods we are using to teach those learning…and feed those starving.

It’s a new day…figure out the NEW WAY.
EDUCATION and the little red school house are still hanging on to the good old days.

If you don’t CHANGE…THIS GENERATION OF CHILDREN will change YOU!

Frankie

November 9th, 2012
2:40 pm

k teacher

that is NOT true…maybe in your instance but not in every instance..then you need to be more involved with your childs education and reinforce everythng that was one that day.

Top School

November 9th, 2012
2:44 pm

aND the computer sits in the palm of your hand….
talk about learning…
It is call ACCESS TO INSTANT RESEARCH on any topic.

Then you use your BRAIN to formulate your opinion or support…or non support….
I think we just used this process to RE-elect a PRESIDENT.

INSTANT INFORMATION…You still have to process it…and form your own opinion…and make a decision.
That’s all our children will need to do…Research, think, process, and decide/choose.

AlreadySheared

November 9th, 2012
2:45 pm

@Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft,

I would emphasis to your item number 4 because it is too little noted among the other comments:

Support their teachers.
For example, once one of our kids got an elementary school report card with an “S” (satisfactory) for conduct instead of an E (excellent).
In our conference with his teacher, we asked why, and his teacher told us.

Afterwards, we had a talk with our son and told him that at some point in the future we would send his teacher an email asking about his conduct, and if the answer was other than “excellent”, there would be consequences (no tv and an early bedtime for a week) at home.

It only took one time to fix things for him, and her, for the rest of the year – I made it quite clear what “in loco parentis” meant. I explained that if I ever checked in at school and found out that he had been disrepectful to me, or not following my directions (me==his teacher in school), there would be consequences.

Made things better for him, his teacher, and the rest of his classmates.

Top School

November 9th, 2012
2:58 pm

If you TEACH your children…the TEACHER has all the information…and all the information is at the school house…and you must wait your turn to learn….
Like a mama bird feeding her baby bird worms. No wonder your child sits lethargic waiting.

As a former teacher…I never taught my students I was the ONLY TEACHER IN THE ROOM. The child sitting next to them was a teacher…the visitor in the room was a teacher… any object can teach you a lesson too.

A pencil…a tool for good or bad. It can write a poem or kill another person…depending on the MIND of the individual that picks it up.

When a parent tells their child the teacher/school has ALL the knowledge they need…AND THEY MUST WAIT…K-12 years to get it. WHAT A MISTAKE!

As a former teacher in Atlanta Public Schools…I made sure I provided at environment where learning took place from everything and everybody. I was only one of many sources children had to learn a skill. Sometimes another child was much better at teaching the skill.

What it takes to make learning take place…an atmosphere where children feel free to question, talk, communicate, observe, and learn at their own pace. My job…to make the environment a fear free zone for learning.

Mitch

November 9th, 2012
3:18 pm

Moreen, preschool is the most critical learning period in every persons life. Am sending you an attachment of things my Grans Parents taught their fourteen children before they started school. This is from1894 to about 1930. All of their children were very successful in life.

Shel

November 9th, 2012
3:30 pm

All these long lists! Mine is short:
1. If you teach your children to love learning by encouraging their curiosity they will be fine no matter what they choose to do or where they are educated.
2. When they fail at something, show them how to learn from their mistake and they will accept it as part of the learning process.
3. Teach them to treat others as they want to be treated, then model that behavior yourself.

Top School

November 9th, 2012
3:39 pm

I’ll be so glad when the computer can process the evaluation progress of grading…as MAKING PROGRESS or NOT MAKING PROGRESS.

Right now …you can sit on a the accomplishment of an A for Excellence…without making ANY PROGRESS.

The entire system needs to be overhauled.
If the student is making an “A” they can still be ineffective if they are not making PROGRESS.

Currently we have labeled excellence…without SUCCESS.

SUCCESS is multifaceted. HONESTY, INTEGRITY, and your ETHICS…these too, are part of the process of EXCELLENCE to obtain Success.

Currently, we measure success with a NARROW test score.

In the future…a computer will measure the psychology of a child in conjunction with their success SO children will less likely grow up to be sociopaths with unethical behaviors that paint an illusion of SUCCESS.

We have enough SOCIOPATHS in positions of leadership causing havoc with many of our “SYSTEMS” banking and education as we speak.

In the future, maybe with the COMPUTER’S measurement of skills like HELPING YOUR NEIGHBOR…and asking questions like WHAT DID YOU GIVE TODAY…rather than what did you compete to take…will be measured in the a QUALITY EDUCATION of an individual’s complete GRADE.

The outdated grading system of A thru F does not completely measure the QUALITY of the individual’s ability to make PROGRESS in a world that is much more advanced. The American …LITTLE PRAIRIE SCHOOL HOUSES are not keeping up with the ADVANCEMENT OF TECHNOLOGY.

Daily they sell the LATEST APPLE VERSION of technology while our schools play hopscotch and color with crayons making no attempt to keep up.

Starik

November 9th, 2012
3:52 pm

Don’t be too hard on television. Watch Modern Marvels and other worthwhile programs with your kids. Watch Turner Classic Movies, History 2, PBS etc and stay away from Dancing With the Stars, Honey BooBoo and Swamp People.

Top School

November 9th, 2012
4:25 pm

“The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice” MLK

Figure this out…

Those wanting to GO BACK TO THE BASICS.
The party of the OLD.
The individuals holding on to their OLD ideas of MORALS based out dated information without the facts.
The OLD METHOD OF COUNTING VOTES.

and even in the midst of all the chaos…and attempts to stop the NEW FROM UNFOLDING…
No matter how hard the OLD try to keep the future from unfolding to CREATE NEW.

EVEN STILL …the divine wheel turns to the beat.

EVERYTHING MUST CHANGE…
and Education is still in control of the OLD.
SLOWLY…DIVINE ORDER…puts the keyboard in money to obtain a NEW PHONE in the hands of the NEW MINDS so

CHANGE occurs REGARDLESS.

With the help of technology…the OLD …experienced their failed efforts to KEEP THE WORLD FROM CHANGING in ELECTION.

OLD vs. NEW

Either those will join in the change for NEW…or the population of OLD will slowly die out.
NATURE …GOD…DIVINE JUSTICE is a slow process…but it bends towards the light so it can grow.

Top School

November 9th, 2012
4:30 pm

The light of the computer, the light of the television and the movie screen, the touch screen on your phone, the light of the sun, the light of the stars…

All information in the light… so that all can see.
The New Renaissance Age.
Take part…or stay in the Dark Ages of the GOOD OLD DAYS.

Tony

November 9th, 2012
4:33 pm

Teach your child to work hard and do his/her best in all they do. Expect your child to do the work. Establish good communication with teachers. Trust your children but verify. Teach them to be responsible for their actions and there are consequences for poor choices. Allow them to fail and dont try to direct every aspect of their lives. Help them discover their strengths and teach them how to strengthen their weaknesses.

HS Teacher

November 9th, 2012
5:09 pm

Does the student have an agenda?

3schoolkids

November 9th, 2012
5:42 pm

Get to know your child’s learning style at a very early age, watch how they play and what interests them the most. The more you read to, work with and engage with your child the easier it will be to spot a learning deficiency and get help for it early. Use their interests to help them learn and motivate themselves. Read some of Dr. Stanley Greenspan’s books on child development.

Research what your children will be learning before you enroll them in school. If you are planning on public school, research the state standards and decide if that is what you want your children to learn. If it isn’t, don’t freak out-research and find another alternative. Do this long before your children are 5 on the eve of kindergarten enrollment.

There are many alternatives these days. Think outside the box. In fact, get rid of the box completely. With the resources now available you can homeschool or have your child take any combination of homeschool and online courses, courses available at centers, or tutoring using your own curriculum or one designed by an educator.

Know a group of parents with children around the same ages? Start an educational co-op. Choose a central location or rotate homes and bring in tutors or teachers to teach your children and split the cost. As they get older, let your children have some input in the choices you make for their education. Let them set their goals for secondary school and college, and then help guide them in reaching those goals.

Lastly, life changes. Don’t fear having to re-evaluate your decisions and make changes, even if it means getting there differently.

KIM

November 9th, 2012
5:59 pm

No one has the answer or it would be marketed, but every blogger has made great suggestions. Turn off your social media while with your child. The GaDOE campaign “Be Connected” is right on. Additionally, the evening meal should be reestablished as a priority. Talk with your child, not at him/her. And talk about the work it takes to be successful, but also talk about the rewards of hard work. Don’t talk about getting your government hand out. Talk about doing more and being better at choices than you were. Talk optimistically about his/her future. Read, read, read and talk, talk, talk. Make your child’s education the number one priority.

Woody

November 9th, 2012
10:19 pm

I find the suggestions to ‘let your child fail’ a bit chilling. Not everyone pulls themselves up by their own bootstraps, or overcomes addiction, or has the heart to engage things that just do not interest them. Be an advocate for your child. Sitting by and watching while they sink slowly into the cement just won’t do.

Dr. Monica Henson

November 9th, 2012
10:33 pm

Ask your child, “What does that remind you of?” or similar questions, such as “Where have you seen/heard/read something like that before?” this helps build the ability to draw comparisons and to identify themes.

Another great question to ask is, “How do you know this is true?” when s/he makes an assertion. It will help your child learn to support an argument with evidence.

English Teacher

November 10th, 2012
7:42 am

1. Respect your child, yourself and other family members. Set this as the example and the standard.
2. This has been stated already but it’s that important: read to your child! Tell them stories, and make them up from scratch and ask them questions about what could happen next. Expand their little imaginations.
3. Keep the communication open between you and the teacher. If something big is happening at home, at least give the teacher a general head’s up. It’s good for us to know so we can tread lightly if necessary, or let you know if we see behaviors we might otherwise put on the back burner.
4. Teachers make mistakes, and most are mortified when they do. We are very hard on ourselves. Understand this is a complex job and (most) of us are doing the best we can. Do not make generalizations based on one experience.
5. Ask your child about his or her friends, how school was, what they did – etc. In other words, get to know your child’s day. This can and should start in preschool. Kids love to talk about their day at this early age and want to show you everything. Show your interest!
6. Volunteer if you can and get to know your child’s school and the people in it.
7. Let your child make small mistakes without freaking out. Let them miss a homework assignment or get a late grade for a project. Don’t leave work to take it up to the school because they left it at home. It’s important for kids to learn what failure is and how to deal with it, and know that it happens and life goes on.

Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft

November 10th, 2012
10:17 am

@ Woody: “A failure is a success if you learn from it.” –Albert Einstein.

If your child is not working or even trying, then I think you should let him/her pay the consequences. If your child doesn’t understand a concept, then absolutely intervene. The point some of us are trying to make is that the best way to change negative behavior is for the child to understand the consequences. Parents bailing kids out only perpetuates apathy and laziness.

Abraham

November 10th, 2012
11:18 am

We Americans claim to be the most civilized people the world has ever known.
However, to know the people we are, it is enough to gauge the language, tone and tenor of the comments given here. We cannot separate ourselves from behaviors, private and public.
We denounce the school boards, administration and teachers, as if we are experts in education.
We easily detach ourselves when convenient, and then hope the system to excel.
Try that at home. By attacking our spouse, child or parent do we expect a optimal home?
We are one people at home, and another outside, school, work, etc.
For best outcomes, we first have to own. By finger-pointing “only”, we will not progress.

Take it from me, the single most important factor in a good education is the parent.
Believe, because I have 2 children, 1 a PhD student and the 2nd a HS senior.
Both my children have different personalities, interests, learning attitudes and performance.
My children have attended different schools. None of them were perfect or were failures.
As parents, we too were neither perfect nor failures.
The teachers who taught our children invariably were doing their very best.
Very rarely did we come across incompetent teachers.
When we did, we worked with the teacher first, principal PTSA and attempted to remedy the situation.
We were hesitant to demonize the entire system.
A good education is outcome of several factors, and “OUR” child is a big one too!
Are we sure about how our child is learning?
Are we sure we as parents, are providing the ideal environment and support?
The variables in education are so many, and we cannot blame any one.
The political favorite these days is to crucify the teacher.
Both my children are doing reasonably well.
And, I give credit to my children, their friends, teachers, supervisors, principals, PTSA and schools.
On our part, as parents we have accepted that parenting is a very responsible and challenging role.
Over the years, about 20 years, as parents of our children, we closely observed education.
An important one, is the involvement of parents.
The friends of our children have done well, and invariably their parents have played a big role.
And, there are some children who haven’t done as well, whose parents couldn’t participate as much.
I can say, “show me a student performing well, and I’m sure there’s an active parent behind it.”
As a society, we need to stop our name calling, finger pointing and aggressive posture towards education, and resolve to work with teachers and the school make the best of education.
Even Bill Gates and Warren Buffet, with unlimited wealth have not found a 100% perfect system, for their own children. In fact, Bill Gates is himself, working to maximize education outcomes in USA.
Finally, let me reiterate that parents are the most vital link to better a child’s education.
There is no perfect school, system, child, teacher or parent. It a combination of all these factors.

Soccermom

November 10th, 2012
12:25 pm

1. Mean what you say and say what you mean. Follow up.
2. Be consistent.
3. Read to and around your child. Give them interesting things to read.
4. Practice/offer good nutrition.
5. Talk to your child and get them to talk to you about a multitude of things.
6. Teach them tolerance and respect for the views of others (not to be confused with subservience or being wishy washy!)
7. Get them involved in music. There IS a correlation with better math scores.
8. Get them involved in some physical activity. It makes kinetic learners more receptive to classroom learning. Girls who are comfortable with their own bodies are more confident and have less eating disorders. And they are healthier altogether.
9. Sleep is a necessity (even if most teenagers don’t think so).

Ole Guy

November 10th, 2012
3:00 pm

One of the hardest things a parent has to face, when “helping” the kid is knowing when the best help is no help…to leave the kid alone and let em decide…ON THEIR OWN…what they’re gonna do. This penchant of parents to get involved can easily lead to a co-dependent attitude in the kid. We are seeing a generation which has come to blame everything…schools, teachers, parents…Santa and the tooth fairy…for their difficulties…everyone and everything but…THEMSELVES.

let the kid come to you for help. Otherwise, leaveim the hell alone.

Janet

November 10th, 2012
5:13 pm

I think the most important thing is to SHOW UP… BE PRESENT. Stay off your cell phone when you are with your kids. I can’t tell you how many times I have seen deflated spirits when a kid scores a goal, makes a basket, or gets a good run… only to turn around and see that their parent was on the phone or texting while it happened.

As a community volunteer and regular parent volunteer in the school, I see so many kids latch onto me because they don’t have a parent present in their lives… who look them in the eye when they’re talking. Don’t get me wrong, they have parents, but they are too caught up in their own world to be involved with what is going on in their kid’s lives. It happens all the time, even in “good” families. And I see it come out in form of neediness. They are just dying for some individual attention.

If your kid likes sports, get involved. Go to their games, and if you can’t afford to join a team, play it in the backyard, or go see high school game. Just SHOW UP.

If your kid like music, get him lessons. Or Share some of your favorite songs with him. Just SHOW UP.

If your kid likes science, go on nature walks with him and talk about how/why the leaves change. If you don’t know the answer, let him see you do some research and find out. Learn together. Just SHOW UP.

Other lessons…
*Teach them to Dream Big – Anything IS possible
*Let them Fail and let them see you Fail – the little failures will prepare them for the big failures later in life
*Teach them that when they fall down… they get right back up and try again. This is a mantra in our house and my kids truly BELIEVE it
*Teach them the importance of dignity, not only their own but for others as well, and to treat others how they want to be treated.
*Teach them to embrace change and new challenges
*Teach them that feeling fear is okay and perfectly normal, but Bravery is feeling fear and doing it anyway.

I think if you show up and be present in their daily lives and inspire them to embrace challenges, dream big, fail often, get up when they fall down, acknowlege fear but be brave anyway, and to treat others with dignity and respect, you are well on your way to being a good parent.

My parents were great parents in alot of ways, but they lacked the ability to inspire us to dream big. I turned out just fine, but I think my status in life is more about me running from what they were (small town, uneducated, blue collar) as opposed to me running toward a goal or chasing a dream. My now 70 year old retired coal miner father tells me that it was me who opened his eyes to what is possible in life. So among the other normal parent duties like discipline and consistancy, I want to Inspire my kids.

Truth in Moderation

November 11th, 2012
3:27 am

Point them to the Creator. Have them learn about the creation and all the answers to life. This will be a guiding light in whatever they do. It will be a constant source of Hope and Faith in a dark world.

Successful single parents stories

November 11th, 2012
11:05 am

Hall Mom

November 12th, 2012
12:46 pm

I know it’s too late, but here is my list.
1. Do not let them quit or give up. They can take a break, but they have to finish the work.
2. Struggle with them. When they see you struggle and ask questions, they see how you go about solving a problem. You are modeling problem-solving for them and they learn how you learn (which they may have inherited).
3. If both of you (and your spouse/mom/neighbor) are stumped, make a plan for how to get the answers you need. Use e-mail, telephone or drop off early to school so the student can get help directly from the teacher.
4. Do not let them quit anything because it is hard. They can choose not to do it again, but once they start (season of sports, piano lessons, reading a hard book), they need to finish to a checkpoint (end of season, recital, end of book). (Do not apply to video games!!!)
5. Check their work. Make sure they put in all the effort it they can; don’t let them get away with half-hearted work.
6. Celebrate the success. Success is not good grades or perfect work, success is completing the work to the best of their ability. To celebrate, do something they love, even if only for 10 min and even if they miss bedtime.

pride and joy

November 12th, 2012
7:18 pm

To Janet — LOVEd YOUR post. Thanks.
P and J

pride and joy

November 12th, 2012
7:21 pm

ANOTHER COMMENT=ANN COULTIER
Whew….harsh.

N. GA Teacher

November 13th, 2012
12:11 am

1. continually emphasize the importance of education and give plenty of praise for efforts and successes; 2. encourage new experiences and well-roundedness: sports, band, ROTC, drama club etc. 3. teach morality and ethics and self-confidence to minimize negative peer influence; 4. read from before age 1 to your kids and gradually have them return the favor; 5. ensure that your kids get plenty of adult interaction, love and perspective and 6. impress upon your child the American ideal that a better life can be gained.

mgdawg

November 13th, 2012
10:52 am

I agree with the first post completely. I will add one thing, make sure your child has rules at home and follows those rules. So many of the kids do whatever they want at home, and because of that feel that they can do the same thing at school. I feel the main purpose in school is to get your child ready for the workplace, as a customer do you want to go to a restaurant and be cussed at? Then don’t allow your child to cuss. As a customer, do you want to go to a restaurant where all the employees have their pants around their ankles and holes everywhere? Then don’t allow your child to it. As a customer, if you have a disagreement with a waiter do you want them to get all in your face and want to fight you? Then don’t let your kid. These are common things that get kids in trouble at school that if you do your job as parents you can avoid. School isn’t that difficult, if you can keep them at school instead of in ISS or suspended, then they will be fine.

Just A Teacher

November 13th, 2012
3:17 pm

Read to (or later, with) your children every day.
Be involved with, but don’t try to control your child’s formal education.
Model appropriate behavior in public.
Model correct grammar when speaking to them.
Take your child to cultural events (plays, concerts, dance recitals, etc.)
Set appropriate bed times and stick to them.
And probably most important of all . . . HAVE THEM IN SCHOOL ON TIME EVERY DAY!

Kieran Pavlick

November 16th, 2012
7:23 am

It may seem sad,but if you look in the mirror and can admit you lack a good education,get your child some tutoring. Or resolve to turn off the television,quit texting, and study with your child.
Also, whatever it takes for a Tutor do it. No new clothes at high end places. Rice and Beans. No sporting evnts. etc.
Old school of the forties. Sending child to College,because Dad gave up pipe Tobacco and Mom sewed her own Clothes.
Extreme I know. Having Geniuses for Parents is about the only sure thing.