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Staying school sharp during summer |
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Written by Linda Morgan
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Mar 01, 2007 |
Who remembers summertime -- a time when the livin' was easy and the
burgers were grilling? Most of us must search deep into our memory
banks for those wistful images of bicycle rides, walks in the park and
pick-up games of sandlot baseball.
If you were born closer to the 21st century, you might have to rent
"Brady Bunch" DVDs to really grasp those summer days of yore. Chances
are your busy parents wanted you active and supervised -- and a safe
distance from empty playgrounds and solitary trails.
Today, summer is the new fall: a time for fresh beginnings and infinite
learning opportunities. In the age of No Child Left Behind, summer's
become No Minute Left Wasted.
A summer slide?
In a Web article titled "The Summer Brain Drain," The Family Education
Network suggests parents consider the benefits of summer school or
summer tutoring. "Summer school can enrich and accelerate learning in
areas where kids show a special interest," it says.
The Johns Hopkins University's Center for Summer Learning Web site
weighs in with this view: "Summer 'slide' is another consequence of
unstructured summers. The 'slide' means that students tend to score
lower on tests of achievement at the end of the summer than they did on
the same tests before summer break."
Many camps, as well as summer schools, provide learning opportunities
in countless academic disciplines along with their usual menu of
swimming, sports and art.
No wonder so many parents are scrambling to enroll their kids in summer
classes, math clubs and science enrichment. For students, that means
less play and more skill building during the vacation months.
Is that such a bad thing?
Many educators think it's not -- as long as kids strike a reasonable
balance between mind-building and mindless fun. "Summer is definitely a
time for kids to explore interests and enjoy more freedom," says Sarah
Shero, youth and recreation assistant director at the Stroum Jewish
Community Center (SJCC) on Mercer Island. "But if they don't keep up
with math and reading comprehension, they could lose up to six months
of what they're learning."
For the first time, the SJCC will offer a pullout summer tutoring
program as an adjunct to summer camp. Kids can opt for one or two hours
a week of individualized instruction during the camp day. "The goal in
the summer is for kids to maintain their knowledge," says Shero. "It
makes it easier on them when they get back to school."
And while kids shouldn't feel overly pressured during summer, they
should always be learning, contends Uzma Merchant, owner of the Redmond
branch of FasTracKids, an international education enrichment program.
"You should expose them to as many things as you can."
Combining play and learning
Stowe Sprague, a Mercer Island mother of three children, ages 9, 7 and
4, likes setting "summer goals" for her kids. "It might be as simple as
learning to tie shoes," she says.
Tuned into her kids' strengths and weaknesses, she knows which child
needs extra help in math, which in writing. Summertime, she finds, is a
chance to jump on those weak spots and build them up. Sprague also
values her children's downtime. "We're talking about 15 to 20 minutes a
day of reviewing," she says. "They have lots of time to play."
Sprague supplies the older kids with workbooks and texts -- and makes
sure they study at the kitchen counter while she prepares dinner. "They
protest, but get into the swing," says Sprague. "I think of it as
another version of quiet time."
That kind of formal structure is fine -- if a child needs it, says Jeff
Sanderson, math instructor and academic dean at Eastside Preparatory
School in Kirkland. Sanderson sometimes assigns work over the summer if
a student "fails to master" the material taught during the school year,
he says. "But if they've done a pretty good job, they should have the
summer off."
Sanderson suggests kids engage in enriching summer experiences that
build on skills learned in the classroom -- such as science camps,
computer camps and robotics.
What else keeps kids thinking? Journal writing, creative writing and
reading, he says. "While summer should be about play, the smart parent
ties that play in with whatever the kids do during the school year."
Taking a trip? Talk about what your child learned in social studies or
history. Selecting books? Choose something that relates to science.
In fact, work and play aren't all that dissimilar, according to Frank
Magusin, head of The Bush School in Seattle. Kids keep learning all the
time. "There's a lot of processing that goes on during downtime --
whether that time's spent reading magazines or creating rules for
games," he says.
Some structured summer learning is not a bad thing, especially if a
child wants to do it, says Magusin. But save time for fun. "I worry
that we are over-programming kids -- and that there are not enough
opportunities for them to play and learn how to be together," says
Magusin. "It's really important to have time when kids can just be
kids."
Linda Morgan, ParentMap's associate editor, writes frequently on education issues.
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