YEA! Blog


Creating Better Lives, Brighter Futures & Stronger Families

To Maintain Your Academic Edge: Summer Break Can’t Be All Break!

Hi and welcome to YEA’s Education Tips Blog.  Today we are going to talk about simple things you can do to help your children maintain their

Science event at Mead Gardens

academic skills over the summer.  Let’s face it, if we let them, kids would languish all day long in front of video games, cell phones and Facebook : )  What can you do to make sure that they maintain a healthy balance between break time and academic time?

TIPS:

1.  Insist on 20-25 minutes of quiet reading time each day.  It works best if the entire family participates, when mom and dad model good habits, children are more likely to continue that habit throughout their lives.

2.  Spend a few times a week exploring applications of mathematics. Research shows that when a skill is seen as relevant to the child’s life, they are more likely to buy in, so the more real world you can make it the better the learning!

  • a. Teach your child to manage money by giving them a practice check book and blank checks (there are many online sites that sell kids blank check kits)
  • b. Buy books with number puzzles.
  • c. Allow your child to cook with you, have them do the measurements, to make it more complex, manipulate the measurements so that your child has to do some basic conversions.
  • d. Visit your local hardware stores for a schedule of kid’s building events.  Both Home Depot, and Lowes offer these events.
  • e. Take advantage of your child’s desire to play video games, and locate some good math programs online.

3.  Promote writing skills by having your child write for 20 minutes each day.

  • a. Give them a summer break journal, ask them to write about 1 great thing that happened each day.
  • b. Take them on a nature hike and afterward have your child write a poem or short story about the experience.
  • c. Pick an interesting picture off the web and have your child write a story about what is happening in the photo.

4.  Choose an educational camp for your child

  • a.  Try to find one that immerses them in their environment and is a combination of subject areas.
  • b. Choose a camp focused on an area where your child is weak, for example if they struggle in math, find a summer camp with a math focus…like an engineering camp or a robotics camp.

The most important thing to remember is you want your child working on their skills every day.  You want to make it fun and interesting.  Take lots of field trips and participate in local educational events when you can, use those as an opportunity to encourage reading, writing, math and scientific exploration.

Are you located in the Central Florida area?  If so, visit our website for more information on summer camps and education events hosted at Mead Gardens!  Hope to see you there!

posted by samantha in Education Advice and have No Comments

Brain Longevity: What to Do to Keep Your Smarts for the Long Haul

Welcome to the Youth Education Alliance’s blog for brains! In this first segment we are going to discuss what you can do to be sure that your brain stays healthy and working at  its best your entire life.

Research shows that to maintain your mental edge throughout your life, you must train your brain!  When your brain learns a challenging new skill, it literally rewires itself creating thousands of new connections.  To stay healthy you must form a habit of lifelong learning.  This will slow down or eliminate the decline in mental acuity typical of old age.  For those of you who want to avoid the decline and stay sharp, we present: YEA! Youth Education Alliance’s suggestions for maximum brain fitness.

You know you’re building connections when you are physically or cognitively challenging yourself, the task should be difficult but achievable with practice (very easy tasks do not actually help your brain build its connections).

OUR RECOMMENDATIONS:

1.  Switch hands on everyday movements (use your opposite hand):

a. Brush your teeth or hair

b. Dial the phone

c. Operate your computer mouse

2.  Involve your whole body in a new skill

a. Learn a sport

b. Learn yoga, tai chi, etc

c. Sculpt (or play with clay, especially good for children)

3.  Travel

a. Taking a vacation is good for your brain, the novel area allows you to navigate in a strange place as well as interact with new cultures, and you are relaxing too! All  brain friendly activities!

4.  Hone Your Senses

a.  Do simple tasks that incorporate more than one sense at a time

–  Get dressed; brush your teeth or hair with your eyes closed

–  Communicate using visual cues only (no words)

–  Listen to music while smelling flowers or incense

5.  Change your routines

–  Take a different path to work

–  Order different meals at your favorite restaurants

–  Shop at a different grocery or clothing store

6.  Read regularly & play word games

–  scrabble

–  crosswords

–  bingo

–  learn a new language

The most important thing to remember is that your brain is a muscle; you must give it daily exercise to keep it healthy!

Join us next time when we discuss exercise and diet and how your habits in these areas shape not only your brain, but the brains of our children as well.

 

posted by samantha in Understanding the Human Brain and have No Comments

How “You’re So Smart” is Destroying Our Youth

Welcome to the first post on the Youth Education Alliance’s Parenting Tips blog.

Today we are going to explore how non-specific praise is creating a generation of fragile children, and what we can do as parents, educators, friends and neighbors to help better support our future!

Before we can get to the actual strategies, we must discuss the two mindsets common in the human brain.

1.  Fixed mindsets: these are individuals who believe that achievements are based
on innate abilities rather than perseverance and hard work.

People fostering a fixed mindset focus on:
a. Non-specific praise, “you’re so smart”, “you’re such a good musician.” , etc.
b. Do not feel as if intelligence is within their control.

2.  Growth mindsets: these are individuals who recognize that learning is a process and through exercising your brain, you can learn, grow and develop new skills.

People fostering a growth mindset focus on:
a. The reward of hard work.
b. Provide task specific praise related to one’s  effort or the ability to overcome a challenge.
c.  The belief that intelligence is within their control.

Traditionally, parents and anyone else who works with children have been told that the key to raising a happy, healthy, successful child is to praise extensively and often.  And so we do/did….little Johnny gets told a thousand times a day how smart he really is.  But the question of the day is, “does the type of praise matter”. According to research the overwhelming answer is YES!!!!!

Obviously society needs to make a shift in child rearing philosophy, the question becomes why and more specifically, HOW?

The why is very simple, research has shown that kids who are praised for their intelligence will develop the following habits and beliefs about themselves:

1.  They will be weak and fragile because the factor their identity is based upon (natural smart-ness), is not something within their control.  As a result, they do not take risks that might possibly shake this belief.

2.  They have decreased confidence in their abilities.

3.  They are less willing to take problem solving risks that might result in failure.

4.  They spend less time working on a hard task, than their peers who are of a growth mindset.

Nowhere, do these problems manifest themselves more apparently then in the classroom.  Students who are praised for intelligence, will rarely choose a hard task, where as students who are praised for effort will choose hard tasks 90% of the time, because they understand that learning, is not a gift, it is something that you work hard at all your life…It IS within their circle of control! We all know that there is real power in what we can control, and it gives us the security to take risks.

So, if praising for intelligence leads to a fixed mindset in our children, how do we help them?  As parents, educators and community members it is our duty to raise the next generation to be bigger and better than we were.  What do we do?

I encourage you to take the YEA! Youth Education Alliance Two Week Challenge. Focus on generating a family climate of growth minded-ness, for two weeks.  Yes, still praise your children, but focus on their efforts and their never give up attitude, instead of non-specific phrases like, “you’re so smart”.  While taking on the challenge, take notice of the changes that you see in your relationships to each other.  Then after the two weeks, if you really see a difference (and you will) you can make a re-commitment to foster growth in your family relationships, both with your children and even with your spouse!

TIPS FOR FAMILIES & EDUCATORS for fostering a growth mindset in your family:

1.  Tell stories and focus on individuals that were successful because of a willingness to work hard.

2.  Focus your praise on effort.

3.  Celebrate and learn from mistakes.

4.  Share your challenges and mistakes with your child and foster an attitude of learning from them. Encourage them to share with you as well; it creates open communication and closeness.

Above all, teach your children that true intelligence is having the confidence to see a challenge for what it is (an opportunity) and never give up.

For more information, specific tips and advice, contact samantha@youtheducationalliance.com or visit our website at www.youtheducationalliance.com

posted by samantha in Parenting Tips and have No Comments