Summer vacation offer families dilemmas and opportunities. For too many kids it becomes a period of intellectual passivity and stalled personal growth. For others – and their parents – it’s time of overload and frantic scheduling. “Summer is a great time for parents to build a relationship with their children” says a renowned child psychologist. And it’s an opportunity both for the kids to learn and for the family to grow together. To make this a reality, educators and psychologists point to several simple strategies that parents can start planning before summer gets under way.
“Summer’s a perfect time for kids to take skills they’ve learnt in a classroom and use them in new ways,” notes a well known educator. Comparing prices in a grocery shop can sharpen children’s mental Math’s skills. Taking measurements to build a new tree house or design a simple plaything teaches Geometry. Car trips provide opportunities to study maps and learn Geography. Some libraries offer free summer reading programs for children.
Sometimes kids will need a small push in the right direction. Victoria encouraged her seven-year old son, Philip, to take part in their local library’s summer reading club. For every book report a child wrote, he/she received a raffle ticket. At the end of the summer sports, prizes were raffled off. Philip who had painstakingly produced seven book reports won an autographed picture of a hockey star, and had his name and one of his reports printed in the local newspaper. (If that’s not possible, encourage children to write letters to editors on current affairs, or about school-related issues.) “ Phillip moaned and groaned about writing the reports, but in the end, he was happy for the efforts he put in,” notes his mother. “And his ability to express himself really improved.”
It is the daily doses of stimulation – intellectual, creative, esteem-building _ that parents can give their children that have the greatest impact.” says an eminent researcher. In an informal study conducted in 1998 other researchers surveyed successful college students about how they spent their free time from age 5 to 12, then compared their activities with those of troubled youngsters. They found that the successful ones were more likely to play spontaneous games, more involved in household chores and more likely to engage in playful activities with their parents. Troubled youngsters spent far less time on chores or family games and more time on their own, planted in front of TV or a video games.
Often, when parents are drawing up their summer plans, their focus is on entertaining and enriching their children. But experts agree that a summer built completely around a child’s self-fulfillment, won’t help a youngster mature into a high thinking, caring member of his family or community. Truly successful kids, say educators, are those who’ve learnt to budget time to help others- whether it’s helping an invalid neighbor or preparing their own family meals a couple of nights a week. Where parents fail, say experts, is in the way such responsibilities are presented.
Too often, they are trotted out as punishments instead of challenges. To make matters worse, parents often nag the child about the task, rather than simply setting a completion deadline and allowing the youngsters to decide when and how he will meet it.
For most parents of school-age kids, the largest block of time they’ll have with their children is in the summer. With a little advance preparation, parents can use the summer to help develop their youngsters into smarter, more creative, more caring human beings.
1.1. On the basis of the passage answer the following briefly:
a. Mention the ways the parents can give the kids a special summer vacation?
b. In what new way can kids use the skills they learn in the classroom during the summer? Mention any two.
c. What advantages did Philip have on writing the book reports?
d. Why should a summer vacation not be built completely around a child’s fulfillment?
1.2. Choose the most appropriate meaning of the given word from the options provided:
e. The word frantic means:
i. well planned ii. done quickly/not organized
iii. meticulous iv. fearless
f. The word strategies means:
i. plans ii. layers iii. rules iv. schedules
g. The word moaned means:
i. to look at the moon ii. to feel happy
iii. to shout loudly iv. to make a low cry
h. The word stimulation means:
i. to stop ii. To aggravate iii. To excite or invigorate iv. to put an end
please answer any part you know.
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