Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - How to make children gain something in the summer vacation?

How to make children gain something in the summer vacation?

0 1 urge children to finish their homework as required.

Holiday homework is not only to consolidate and improve the original knowledge, but also to do "warm-up" training for learning new lessons next semester. Parents should educate their children to pay attention to holiday homework. In general, school teachers will print out the contents, requirements and "progress" of each subject's homework and send it to students. Parents should take the initiative to ask for "a look" and be aware of it so as to carry out "target management" and "monitoring" in time.

Specifically, it is to guide children to decompose specific tasks and ensure the progress of completing tasks every day. After completing the specified tasks, go to appropriate leisure and entertainment. If parents don't carry out effective "target management" and "timely monitoring", some children will "delay", "slack off" or "relax before tightening", and even "cram for Buddha's feet" a few days before school starts, and they are in a hurry and perfunctory. The quality of homework can not be guaranteed, and it is not conducive to developing good study habits.

Let the children have a planned and orderly holiday.

Parents and children work out schedules together and follow them, so as to achieve the goal of combining work and rest. Parents should also guide their children to complete the overall arrangement of holidays. It is best to do it independently, which can cultivate children's overall planning ability and self-adjustment ability. When designing holiday activities, parents must gradually let go and encourage their children to develop in the direction of initiative, independence, creativity and group activities among small partners. This is not only to save parents' time, but also to cultivate children's independent personality. The genius of parents' educational art lies in their ability to guide their children to do their own things all day. It is enough for parents to observe, guide and evaluate a little. Parents' concern for children's activities should be manifested as "spiritual participation" rather than substitution. Therefore, as long as the children's activities are basically reasonable, parents should not deny or modify too much according to their own wishes.