| Top Ten Mistakes Parents Make
Like
most parents, you probably have done everything to get
your children ready to go back to school this month: Registered
them,
paid fees, bought school supplies and new clothes, checked
out their new classroom, and talked with them about how
much fun this upcoming school year will be. It seems like
you should be all set - except for your worries about how
good of a "homework coach" you will be this year,
trying to help your children be successful in school and
enjoy life-long learning.
As
parents, we often approach our children's school performance
and school success with anxiety and tension. We want our
children to succeed so they feel happy about their accomplishments
and have better opportunities in the future. But we also
have the nagging feeling that if our child doesn't do well
in school, it will reflect poorly on us as parents. We
feel pressured to make sure they DO succeed. Often, with
the best of intentions, we end up using exactly the wrong
strategies:
Nagging
and Lecturing
Parents usually don't start nagging children about homework and study habits
until there is a problem (e.g., being sloppy with homework, or not wanting
to do homework at all). Nagging only makes the problem worse because your child
will either get angry at you or tune you out. Instead, try to problem-solve
together with your child. Ask them to come up with several ideas on their own
for how to improve this situation. Brainstorm about how to make homework more
fun. Try out at least one of their ideas and discuss how it worked.
Taking
Over
You don't trust your child to get things done right, so you tell them what
to do, when and how. You organize things for them, keep track of deadlines,
make sure they stay on track. This may work in the short run but doesn't teach
children to become independent learners who take responsibility for their work.
Instead of taking over, help your child figure out what they need to do by
asking questions: "What will you do? When will you do it? How will I know?
How do you want me to hold you accountable for this?" If children are
actively involved in this kind of goal setting, they are more likely to follow
through.
Focusing
on the Future Benefits of School
As parents, we know how important a good education will be later in life. Just
don't expect your children to be motivated by this idea; they are more focused
on the here and now and give little thought to the future. To motivate them,
focus on the immediate benefits of learning (having fun, developing new skills,
and ability to play team sports in school if grades are good.)
Leaving
Homework for the End of the Day
If homework is scheduled too late in the evening, with only bedtime to follow
and no time to play, children won’t be motivated to be efficient, and
also won’t want to go to bed since they haven’t had any fun yet.
Increase your children’s motivation to complete homework by giving them
something to look forward to afterwards. Favorite TV shows, videogames, talking
on the phone, or having a special snack are all great rewards after homework
is completed, and may provide the extra incentive your child needs to get through
a boring and tedious task.
Insisting
on Long Study Sessions
" You will sit here until all your homework is done" - this can feel
overwhelming to children and create resistance, resulting in conflict. Instead,
schedule 10-15 minutes of study time, followed by a 5-min. break, then another
15 minutes of study. Repeat as often as necessary to complete homework. Children
actually get more done that way.
Grounding
Children for Missed Assignments and Poor Grades
This is not effective for helping them do better in the future. Instead, use
problem solving ("What would help you do better next time?"), offer
support, and give them incentives for good performance (extra privileges, special
rewards).
Not
Communicating With Teachers
This means two-way communication: Let the teacher know early on how they can
best support your child's learning (how does your child learn best?) -then
ask the teacher periodically, "What's the best thing I can do to help
my child with this subject at home?" Don’t wait until parent-teacher
conferences to find out how your child is doing, or what kinds of problems
need to be corrected.
Overfocusing
on Grades and Test Scores
When children get the message that grades are all that counts, they quickly
lose interest in the process of discovery and learning, and instead focus only
on the outcome. If they can't achieve the expected grade or score, they end
up feeling bad which usually does not increase their motivation to do better.
Children also need to hear from us that success comes in many forms. Some students
will excel in sports, drama, music, or art; some develop excellent leadership
skills, good citizenship, become peer mediators, or relate well to animals.
Whatever your child's strengths are, be sure you focus on those talents more
than you focus on their grades.
Sticking
Only to the Curriculum
As long as children learn what's expected of them in school, that's good enough,
right? Chances are that this year's school curriculum doesn't exactly match
his or her own interests and curiosity (maybe they are into whales and sharks,
space travel, jungle life, airplanes, etc). Encourage children's natural love
for learning by asking, "If you could learn about anything you wanted
to, what would you like to learn?" - then provide them with books, videos,
trips to museums, and (most importantly) adult conversations about those topics.
Not
Modeling Life-Long Learning
Do your children see you interested and enthusiastic about learning, studying,
and achieving? Do you read books at home? Go to museums? Look things up? Talk
about new ideas? Remember that our children are always watching what we are
doing.
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