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And Then There's Summer, Children! E-mail
Sunday, 01 June 2008

by Rosemary Lee Potter, Ed.D.

Special to Tropical Breeze

Now that school is out, for a few days, maybe even a few weeks, everybody, particularly older students shriek "Hooray!" or "Whoo Hoo!" You know, "...no more teachers, no more books!" However, very, very soon, late nights, hanging out, and mall cruising may just not be enough to accomplish that terrific vacation! The thing is that parents have at summer's start, an excellent opportunity to make that season a valuable, exciting, growing experience.

Here are eight tips which may accomplish successful summer parenting AND so-called vacationing!

1. If possible plan some family time at home into most days. It need not be a big activity -- maybe a simple picnic supper together or everybody runs hollering through the hose or the water slide. We do mean everybody.

All watch a rented video together. We said all again -- let kids help choose it. What ever you do, include nutritious snacks and have water out and cool for all to swig together! ( Make a point of recycling the bottles). Everyone is so busy, do not have one guilty if planned time together seems kind of intrusive. One mom admits that she honestly felt a bit resentful for the time -- BUT only at first!

And, yes, if especially the older kids want one friend to be on hand (not every time expected) -- it's fine. Think of the alternative if your child enjoys being at someone else's pool instead at home with you and the family having a wild, wet time.

2. Make sure that the whole family -- not just the youngest folks -- get out together to a park. If not a cook-out, be sure again there's food. Take along Frisbees and actually break out the croquet game and/or horseshoes.

3. Take some time as a family to help others. If you can involve youngsters of all ages in weeding out play "stuff" in good shape, but outgrown, as a family, dropped off together at a designated charity spot! Really bad boring day or one with rain? Set up a greeting card "factory" in which everybody creates a greeting card for a retirement or rehab facility. Help young ones with the words and let everybody decorate AND deliver to the front desk of the designated care center. Helping to drop off the items is part of the experience.

4. On or off-line help your children, and, ah yes, even the older ones make family contact with one of their cousins, grandparents far away. Keeping in touch is what makes growing children know that a family is an important "forever."

5. Read! Read! Read! So formal reading and language arts instruction is no longer a daily thing, keep up the practice, even in a subtle way. Of course, read to the youngsters -- maybe not just at bedtime. Hmm! They need to read too. Several middle schools allowed students to check out six books over the summer. The public libraries now have reading lists of popular student-chosen books, often as bookmarks! There is a saying, "The more you read, the better you read." And so it's no coincidence that studies show that better readers are eyeballing thousands more words than the poor readers are.

Must reading "be" books? Of course not. It can be comics , newspapers, sports magazines, recipes, directions for toys and projects, road signs, maps -- just so readers keep on reading during summer months.

6. Swim. Yes, go have fun, but make sure whatever the age or level of skill, young people take swimming classes AND then go do it!

7. Rest. Many children and even older students think if there is any downtime at all, it's boring. No wonder, every kind of media's characters pretty much paints the picture that everything must be totally entertaining every single minute!

Just taking it easy is nice for a change, but parents must model this. If they run to and fro and keep an ever-increasingly hectic pace, so then their offspring do likewise.

Does "taking it easy" mean that everyone splits to his/her own room to watch or play whatever? Not really, but, if not together, at least set up a plan where computers don't separate, but maybe instead are one way family members together plan a vacation.

Could folks just get an iced popsicle and sit out on the back porch or swing together? Perhaps too simple a slow-down? Maybe. Maybe not. Some folks found a surprise when they tried it...something called family fun.

8. Just to think ahead, if there is any medical situation upcoming be it dentistry or some other issue, summer is a good time to get the work done. While parents and students cannot avoid emergency needs during the school year, it is amazing how often students lose school instructional time with appointments during the school day. Just a thought.

There are many, many wonderful ways in which summer can be a joyful learning experience for children and families. It is not really time off for families. Parents who take time to plan a rich summer season show their children that year round your family matter!

© 2008 Rosemary Lee Potter. All Rights Reserved.

Rosemary Lee Potter, Ed.D., has been a teacher since 1960, including 21 years at Safety Harbor Middle School, and is now a reading teacher at Carwise Middle School, Palm Harbor. Contact her at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it or by mail in care of Tropical Breeze, P.O. Box 585, Safety Harbor, FL 34695.

 
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