Wednesday, December 17, 2008

BEAT THE REPORT CARD BLUES



Free Guide Gives Parents Tips and Suggestions To Avoid Report Cards
That Don’t Make the Grade

“You and Your Child’s Report Card” Guide From Sylvan Learning
Available at www.SylvanLearning.com


Report card day is often one of the school year’s most stressful times for parents and students. Yet parents can take simple steps to eliminate report card surprises and set the stage for their child’s year-round academic success.

“You and Your Child’s Report Card,” a free parents’ guide available from Sylvan Learning at http://tutoring.sylvanlearning.com/report-card-guide.cfm, gives parents numerous tips and suggestions to turn report card day into a day of achievement and celebration.

It’s common for children to feel anxious about bringing home their report cards. However, by frequently talking about school and discussing how your child is doing in each subject, parents can help their child prepare for report cards and reduce any apprehension he has about sharing his grades with you.

Report cards enable parents to assess their child’s academic progress and assess his or her strengths and weaknesses. They also provide parents with an opportunity for further insight into their child’s progress in school.

When report cards come home, parents should discuss their child’s progress and any changes from previous terms. A report card is a communication tool and a reminder for parents to stay involved in their child’s education.

Sylvan Learning’s free online report card guide offers parents seven key pieces of advice for communicating with their children to help them achieve academic success. Advice offered in “You and Your Child’s Report Card” includes:

  • Maintain open lines of communication
  • Set goals with your child
  • Organize your child’s academics
  • Regularly track progress
  • Identify trouble spots
  • Get to know your child’s teacher
  • Celebrate successes

The free online report card communications guide, and a variety of booklets and journals for students to help build reading, math and writing skills, can be found on Sylvan Learning’s web site at http://www.sylvanlearning.com/.


Sylvan helps transform unique kids into uniquely inspired learners with the skills to do better in school and the confidence to do better in everything else.


Thursday, December 11, 2008

Tips for Test Success

CLICK THE TITLE ABOVE to access Dr. Rick's Blog about the "DO'S AND DON'TS" to help children prepare for exams.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Friday, December 5, 2008

Let Sylvan Be Your Educational Resource







CLICK THE TITLE ABOVE to see our relevant articles that provide useful and timely information to assist families in their children's learning processes.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Fun Tips To Help Children Master Math

All Children Can Succeed At Math!

Are some students destined to struggle with mathematics because they're inherently "not good at math?" According to the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) and Sylvan Learning Center, the answer is no. A study from NCTM shows that everyone can succeed at math.

Parents can help their children master math and dispel the notion that math is difficult by talking math with children as they use it in everyday activities whether it be shopping, cooking or dining out. The math experts at Sylvan Learning Center believe that by combining traditional math drills and memorization of math facts and formulas with real-life examples and activities, math becomes more approachable and math discovery becomes fun. Using games and activities is a great way to encourage math discovery and enhance basic skills.

Sylvan Learning Center offers tips and ideas to help your children have fun and become successful at solving math problems:

1. Play popular board games that require basic math skills. Chutes and Ladders® and RackO® develop number sense. "24" and Yahtzee® help computation speed and accuracy, and problem solving skills are developed through games like TriOminos® and Connect Four®.

2. Review previously learned math concepts before tackling new assignments. Starting with familiar concepts helps build your child's retention and confidence.

3. Ask your child's math teacher for a schedule of math topics. Take time to develop two projects or exercises per week that will reinforce what your child is learning in class.

4. Work with your child to solve math problems using multiple methods. This will help your child develop a fuller understanding of the computation concepts.

5. Provide pictorial examples of math concepts. Draw or collect pictures of animals, objects or people to show addition, subtraction, multiplication, division and fractions.

6. If your child receives an allowance, use it to formulate mathematics problems and teach them about saving. For older children, relate percentage problems to their allowance.

7. Allow your child to plan the next family trip. Help him compute miles, cost of gas, expenses for food, hotel and entertainment.

8. Encourage your child to do math aloud and to explain the series of steps used to solve the problem.

9. Follow your child's progress through her math book, tests and homework.

10. Don't let problems with math linger. Since math builds on previously learned concepts, it's essential to identify and address problems early so they don't compound (to use a math term).

11. Assemble puzzles with your child. Puzzles help children learn spatial and visual organization. These are the basic lessons of geometry.

12. A deck of cards can be a valuable math tool. Card games begin to teach the lesson of probability and reinforce addition and subtraction memorization for children learning basic math facts.

13. Dice are helpful for younger children to practice number facts to six. If they are stumped, they can count the dots to find the sum.

14. Relate math to your child's favorite sport. Keeping score is a math exercise! Ask him to calculate the number of points needed for his favorite team to win. Encourage him to create multiple point combinations to reach that score.

15. Play other car games like "guess my number." This will reinforce logic skills with children of all ages.

16. Dominoes are a great game for children of all ages. Smaller children can use them to recognize similar quantities while older children can explore the concepts of probability.

17. Use Sylvan Learning Center's online Math Activity Book to help sustain and renew children's interests in math learning and discovery. Log on to tutoring.sylvanlearning.com/parent_learning_resources.cfm and download or print math writing topics, trivia, questions and puzzles.

CONTACT US as your local Sylvan Tutoring Expert@ 503 692-5080 (Tualatin, OR)

OR for the center nearest you call 1-888-EDUCATE http://www.sylvanlearning.com/