Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Relax
+1
Every summer when I was a kid I lounged around by the pool. Sometimes I went to the library or to a friend's house. I never completed my summer reading list and my parents did not stress about it. I was a national merit semi finalist and took a full ride academic scholarship, even though my parents had money for me. I went to grad school and am very successful. I plan to retire in my mid 40s (2-3 years from now). I don't stress about this stuff and am raising my kids with the same relaxed attitude my parents had. They will be fine!
I send the older one to sleep away camp for 6 weeks. The little one does some camps, tons of TV, lots of pool time. We stay at our summer house for 2 months and travel internationally for the rest of the time. She's read like one or two easy books.
Anonymous wrote:Relax
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 7yo is running a Rainbow Loom factory in her bedroom this summer while Dad teleworks. She's happy and I guess working on her fine motor skills.
This was me at that age! I had a SAHM and was a creative but indoor kid, ha. Love it!
Anonymous wrote:My 7yo is running a Rainbow Loom factory in her bedroom this summer while Dad teleworks. She's happy and I guess working on her fine motor skills.
Anonymous wrote:My 6 yo started the summer doing swim team but didn’t have the energy to keep up with it after summer camp started. He’s exhausted after a day at camp (that includes swimming). So now we’re doing summer camp, lots of weekend time at the pool, museum visits, play dates & parties, and trips/visits with friends & family. This is plenty for my kid. Agree with others to make swimming a priority if your kid can’t swim yet.
Anonymous wrote:Kids are 5 and 8. Preschool and Day camp - all day, every day.
Older child is doing the county library reading program and summer swim team (5x 30 min per week)
Younger child did 2 weeks of swim lessons and gets 2x a week swimming just for fun in the evening.
Both kids work on their summer learning goals for 10-15 min per day. They make up the curriculum with me and we make a poster that we check off as we go.
Rising K asked us to learn how to read, so we are working on the book “How to Teach Your Child to read in 100 easy lessons”. He does 5 Khan lessons or 5 short math worksheets to be like his brother. He practices handwriting because he LOVES to make signs and cards and is constantly asking us to spell things for him and then crying when he gets letters backwards.
Rising 3rd grader asked to read 1 chapter book per week and have a parent read the same one. We want him to work on his writing, so he does a writing prompt or writes 3-5 sentences as a letter to a friend or relative once each week. He wants to learn all the state capitals, so we do 5 new ones each week at dinner and also learn facts about the states as a family. He is working on his multiplication tables - but we’re slacking a bit on that because it’s part of 3rd grade coming up.
Nothing happens if they don’t do their summer learning and we don’t cajole or remind them. If they do meet their goals, they get small prizes each week. Adults in our home have summer goals too that we work towards and show the kids our progress towards our reading and workout goals or getting better at our hobbies.