Resources For Learning
Your student spends several hours a week in the classroom learning, exploring and growing as individuals. However, it is only through additional and continued practice that your student will master and retain many of the skills which they learn in the classroom! Outside of the classroom your child has the opportunity to strengthen his or her skills as readers, writers and mathematicians by practicing! Just like anything else, we can only get better at being students by practicing.
Because of this, it is essential that you allow your students to have fun learning through continued practice! To practice reading means to simply read. Each night your student should read 20-30 minutes. This reading can be done to a sibling, to a parent, to a grandparent, to a neighbor, to a friend or to themselves. They can read books, magazines, newspapers or any other quality reading material!
In addition to reading, your child should also continually practice his or her math skills. Math is a little bit more difficult to practice because drilling kids with math questions becomes mundane and causes them to dislike math. The link above will bring you to a website where your child will be able to practice his or her math skills, language skills, spelling skills and more through the playing of educational games. It will strengthen your child's ability to be a great mathematician, reader and writer while they get to have fun playing!
Your student spends several hours a week in the classroom learning, exploring and growing as individuals. However, it is only through additional and continued practice that your student will master and retain many of the skills which they learn in the classroom! Outside of the classroom your child has the opportunity to strengthen his or her skills as readers, writers and mathematicians by practicing! Just like anything else, we can only get better at being students by practicing.
Because of this, it is essential that you allow your students to have fun learning through continued practice! To practice reading means to simply read. Each night your student should read 20-30 minutes. This reading can be done to a sibling, to a parent, to a grandparent, to a neighbor, to a friend or to themselves. They can read books, magazines, newspapers or any other quality reading material!
In addition to reading, your child should also continually practice his or her math skills. Math is a little bit more difficult to practice because drilling kids with math questions becomes mundane and causes them to dislike math. The link above will bring you to a website where your child will be able to practice his or her math skills, language skills, spelling skills and more through the playing of educational games. It will strengthen your child's ability to be a great mathematician, reader and writer while they get to have fun playing!