Anonymous wrote:DD8
Reading for 30 min. Sometimes more
Duolingo 20-30 min.
Duolingo Math 5-10 min.
10 pages in math workbook (takes 15-20 min.)
Usually gets it done in the morning, M-F
I don’t force it, it’s a part of her morning routine and fun for her. She loves math.
Anonymous wrote:Parents who are too lazy to do academics over the summer are also not smart enough to make the connections between time spent on academics and treatment by teachers and classmates. I see it every year, the students who did nothing academic over a 3 month summer break have the hardest time adjusting when the school year starts, spend the first month annoying the teacher and most of the class because they can't get with the program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids are doing no homework over the summer. What is the objective of doing this?
Acceleration in some subjects, prevention of learning loss in others. Why do the "none" people get bent out of shape about other families doing academics over the summer? If all families kept up, we wouldn't have to suffer through a full month of tedious review for the dummies at the beginning of every school year.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are doing no homework over the summer. What is the objective of doing this?
Anonymous wrote:None. Why? It’s summer. They do catch up on august/September.
My dyslexic kid has a tutor once a week for an hour. It’s plenty.
Other than that, just summer reading.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are doing no homework over the summer. What is the objective of doing this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids are doing no homework over the summer. What is the objective of doing this?
To avoid learning loss. It’s an issue for my kid who is behind and forgets a lot over summer.
For my other kid it’s to teach things that aren’t taught in school, like geography.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are doing no homework over the summer. What is the objective of doing this?