Tag Archives: homework help

6 Creative Ways to Teach Your Child to Proofread

I have yet to meet a student who proofreads willingly. However, you can teach  your child to proofread with less hassle using some simple strategies. Best of all, you can add some fun to the process!

Teach Your Child to Proofread Using Games

One of the best ways to teach your child to proofread is by setting up a treasure hunt for mistakes. Go through the paper yourself and make notes about categories of errors that you wish the student to find. Make note of things like capitalization problems, missing punctuation, spelling, and so forth. Be sure to figure out how many of each type of problem you see. Now send your child on a treasure hunt. Challenge him or her to find the mistakes that you already know are there.

Make the game more challenging by providing only the numbers of types of errors instead of telling the student the categories. For example, challenge him or her to figure out which type of mistake was made three times in the paper, and which one happened six times.

You can also indulge in a role-playing game. Give your child a classic red pen and have him or her correct the paper as the teacher would. Make the focus of the activity finding and correcting mistakes instead of having a “perfect” paper, and then “grade” the student’s work based on how well they played teacher.

Teach Your Child to Proofread with Independent Strategies

As your student matures, he or she will need to take on the responsibility of editing his or her own work without prompting. Instill some of these habits to help teach your child to proofread:

  • Always use the grammar checker and spell checker built into most word processing software.  There is absolutely no harm in using the tools that have been provided. Just be sure your student realizes that these are far from infallible, and there is no substitute for going over the writing by hand as well.
  • Show your student how reading through the paper backwards can disrupt tricks of the eye where we see what we expect to see. By reading from the end to the beginning, your learner will need to concentrate on each word individually, and will catch spelling mistakes and even some punctuation and capitalization errors.
  • Create a proofreading and editing checklist with your student. List categories of errors, with a focus on the common types that trouble him or her. Use the checklist to guide proofreading and editing.  Go through the paper once for each category, just looking for that type of error.
Do You Have Other Homework Hassles?

You’ll want to watch the free webinar: How to Eliminate Homework Hassles in 30 Minutes a Day.  Nearly every parent has troublesome homework issues, but there ARE solutions. You can create peace in your household and eliminate the nightly battle over homework.  Watch the webinar and grab your free guidebook that will walk you through a proven process to make homework time go more smoothly at your house.

Teach your child to proofread

3 Things You Need to Know About Learning Styles

What, exactly, are learning styles? I’m glad you asked! The term learning style refers to an individual’s preferred avenue for taking in information.  When we know a person’s learning style, we can tailor teaching and study methods to allow for most efficient teaching and improve retention and success.

In a nutshell, there are three main types of learning styles.  These can be combined and they can change over time and in different circumstances.

Visual Learners do best with material they can see, like pictures, charts, graphs, and diagrams.  They may prefer reading to listening to a lecture.

Auditory Learners understand and retain information more easily when it is presented orally. They like to discuss, listen, and even sing.

Kinesthetic Learners learn best through movement. These are the hands-on learners who like demonstrations, experiments, and watching videos.

Here’s my favorite video explanation of learning styles:

You can discover a person’s primary learning style or styles through checklists or questionnaires, or even by observation.  Here’s one example: Learning Styles Questionnaire .  Now, what can you do with this information now that you know it?

Learning Styles Give Clues about What Will Frustrate Kids

Once you know a child’s learning style, you can predict what types of assignments and study strategies will be frustrating to your student. This will allow you to provide support and react in a more productive manner.

For example, your student may be a kinesthetic learner who prefers hands-on learning. This student may well find gathering information from a textbook to be boring or frustrating, since that’s a visual task. You can help by guiding your student to hands-on ways to accomplish the same task, such as copying information or acting out the information.

Learning Styles control how easily information is absorbed.

Your student will learn best if information is presented in the channel that he or she is most comfortable with. You can familiarize yourself with various presentation strategies that match your student’s learning style.  Use your knowledge to reteach or re-present information when you know that the school or class presentation was not a good fit for your student.

Learning Styles show you how to guide study strategies

Teach  your student how to accommodate his or her strongest learning style. School presentations are primarily auditory (lecture-style). Study materials are primarily visual (textbooks and handouts). Show your student how to find the material in the format that is most compatible with his or her primary learning style.  Consider one or more of the study strategies on the following list:

Visual Learners
  • Write down important points
  • Highlight key information
  • Color-code information
  • Use diagrams, charts, pictures to organize information
  • Write down things to memorize and hang them where they will be seen frequently
  • Visualize important information
  • Read the text before going to class
  • Copy directions before beginning projects
  • Use flow charts to recall processes
Auditory Learners
  • Use a recorder to record lectures and discussions when possible
  • Listen to recorded information while driving/riding, while doing household chores, etc.
  • Read in a whisper or aloud when possible
  • Discuss with others, quiz orally
  • Sing or set ideas to music
  • Read text after class (unless assigned ahead of time)
  • Interview experts on the topic
  • Read directions out loud before beginning a project
Kinesthetic Learners
  • When possible, make models, do experiments, act out ideas
  • Study for short periods (10-15 minutes) with frequent breaks
  • Use a computer to type ideas
  • Work on memorization by doing an action with each item, such as an exercise
  • Play games such as Memory to match questions and answers
  • Try reading or watching while standing up or while using a fidget
  • Trace and copy words to learn spellings, vocabulary, and other facts
  • Play games modeled after television quiz shows to study, such as Jeopardy

Make sure you are getting in on all of the action and receiving all the tips!  Sign up for the Homework Help group to grab up some goodies and get advice on helping your student tame homework monsters. CLICK HERE to join this free group!

NOW is the Time to Fix Homework Headaches

Without a homework habit, frustration is sure to come your way.This poor woman is up to her eyeballs in frustration.  How often do you end up looking like this when you need to get your kids going on their homework?  There ARE solutions.  One important strategy is to build a “homework habit.”

Be Consistent with the Homework Habit

One reason that kids protest homework so mightily is that the tactic often works.

Counter this by standing your ground, each and every day, and insisting that time be spent on improving academic skills.  Schoolwork, of course, has first priority, but if there is not enough schoolwork to fill the them, then grab some of your own back-pocket ideas and get the kids moving on them.

If you are consistent with your expectation that the kids WILL be working on academic pursuits for a certain amount of time each and every day, then the protests will quickly dwindle down to nothing.  Just like they protested brushing their teeth mightily back when they were toddlers, but you stood your ground and now that they are older they do it automatically, the same strategy will work with homework.

Make It a Daily Homework Habit

How much time SHOULD kids be spending on their academic pursuits each day?  This is a great place to use your own judgment but several notable professional groups (like the National PTA and the NEA) recommend approximately 10 minutes for each year of school.  So first graders should spend ten minutes daily, third graders should be working for thirty minutes, and so on up to twelfth graders working approximately two hours.

The important part is that word, daily.  It’s not “only if the teacher sends homework” or “only on school days,” or “not over vacation days.”  DAILY means DAILY.  Now, you can negotiate a day off here or there, especially as a reward for consistency or for a job well done on a project, but for the most part, if you enforce the DAILY habit, the kids will quit protesting.

And if you are having more headaches than you like when it comes to homework routines, be sure to sign up for the webinar coming up on Tuesday, July 26, 2016 at 7 PM Eastern Time: How to Eliminate Homework Hassles in 30 Minutes a Day.  Click HERE to grab your spot for this free webinar!!