Supplementing School—Ways to Enhance Your Child’s Education

Supplementing School—Ways to Enhance Your Child’s Education

January 26, 2017, Epoch Times

 

If you, like so many parents today, find something lacking in the education your child is receiving at school, I have good news.

You don’t have to spend hours on weeknights fighting the system at Board of Education meetings and attempting to change the ways of a decades-old bureaucratic institution.

Just as The Good Witch says to Dorothy in “The Wizard of Oz,”  “You don’t need to be helped any longer. You’ve always had the power.”

Supplement your child’s education.  It’s not as difficult as it sounds; a few tweaks at home can open your children up to a world of learning opportunities they simply won’t get at school.

Decorate With Learning in Mind

Yes, decorate.

Your home environment plays a larger role in your child’s education than you may be aware. The objects you fill your home with, the media messages you invite in, the spaces, the light, the smells, and the warmth all contribute to the environment in which your children will do much of their playing, exploring, and learning.

If your home is very cluttered, it’s likely difficult to find freedom to explore. Likewise, if temptations of passive entertainment like video games, television, YouTube, and so on, are always beckoning to your children, time they may have been creating or learning is being usurped.

On the contrary, if you’ve got maps on the wall, and clear table tops to make things on, and books galore to explore, and craft supplies in abundance, and toys that call for imagination and ingenuity, your home environment is set up as an invitation to play and explore and learn.

When you consider changes to your space, think from the perspective of designing your child’s learning environment and see what new ideas come to mind.

Love Books

Fill your home with real books and read them.

Allow for quiet reading time in your home and individually or read together. Talk about books. Take care of your books. Appreciate books.

Strong readers become strong learners. Until your children are very strong readers, read aloud to them as much as you possibly can. Don’t worry if they learn to read “late” or more slowly than their siblings or peers. Your job is to impart to love of reading: to show them what a joy a good book is.

Learn All the Time

Understand that whether it is your intention or not, those little sponges of yours are learning all the time. Involve your kids in whatever you are doing, whether it be as mundane as laundry or as exciting as visiting a space museum. See the learning opportunity in your family’s activities and capitalize on them as much as you can.

Encourage endless questions even if it makes things take longer. Encourage self-sufficiency by giving kids the freedom to make their own lunch or fix a broken faucet or change a lightbulb or map the way to the park.

Travel Together

As much as you can, explore the world around you with your kids.

Involve your children in every aspect of your travel plans—the budget, the itinerary, the map, the cuisine, the must-see places.

Utilize the time before you leave to learn about your destination, it’s history, it’s culture.

Whether you’re able to travel only a few miles from home for a day or around the world over the course of weeks, travel is an enriching and educational experience that will benefit your children for a lifetime.

Encourage Making and Doing

Before your kids come home from school one day, set out paints, paintbrushes, and paper and see what happens to their afternoon. Encourage your kids to use their hands and make things.

Any new skill they are curious about, follow it. Lessons, YouTube tutorials, and good old fashioned trial and error are all great ways to learn to make and do.

View School as the Supplement

The truth is your children are probably more likely to realize their potential within a robust and free learning environment at home than within the confines of a typical school system. Shift your thinking to view school as a supplement to their true education that happens at home. And watch them soar.