The
Middle School Years: Achieving the Best Education for Your
Child Grades 5-8
by Michele A. Hernández
Chapter 1
Organization
101: Teaching Your Child How to Get His Act Together
Before setting out to design a book that
would be helpful for both parents and students, I sent out a survey to
roughly 650 parents at the private school where I work. I asked them a
series of questions about education: what skills they felt their children
lacked, what they wished the schools would teach, and what they already
did in order to help their children. I grouped all these questions into
different subject areas and outlined the book’s major chapters around
parents’ most pressing concerns.
My biggest surprise was that an
overwhelming number of parents (about 80 percent of those surveyed) said
they felt that their children’s most serious problem was a total lack of
organizational skills: how to organize a locker, a backpack, a notebook, a
schedule–the list went on and on. Most parents wished that the school
had a larger role in teaching these skills but acknowledged that they
wished they were better informed to help their children learn these vital
skills at home.
Since I monitor the academic progress of
all students on our campus (high school and middle school), I have the
opportunity to speak to many parents every day about their children’s
academic struggles. In the majority of cases, their academic problems are
rooted in their inability to organize their time, their workload, and
their various after-school commitments, rather than in any lack of
academic talent. The more time I spend in schools, the more clear it is to
me that a student who learns to be a master of his own schedule is much
more likely to succeed than an equally bright student who is
organizationally impaired.
Why is it that young middle school students
have such difficulty organizing their lives? The hardest adjustment for
young children is the transition from having the same teacher all day (as
most do in elementary school) to having a different teacher for every
subject (the norm for middle school). More than any other factor, this
dramatic procedural change marks the transition from the comforting
environment of elementary school to the often "sink-or-swim"
environment of middle school.
Think of the change from your child’s
perspective: Children love predictability and regularity. For years they
have been accustomed to having the same person teach them all day, almost
always in the same room. They have had time to learn that teacher’s
idiosyncrasies: Does she write the assignments on the board? On a piece of
paper that goes home to parents? Whatever the case may be, they quickly
adapt to the teacher’s methods, and through sheer repetition, become
more or less adept at keeping track of assignments.
Suddenly, at the onset of sixth grade,
students may find themselves in a different location (some schools switch
campuses after the fifth grade), while at the same time their routine is
completely disrupted. Not only do they have a different teacher for every
subject, they also have to move physically from classroom to
classroom–the teachers do not come to them. Add to that the confusion of
five different ways of assigning homework in the best of cases; that is,
assuming each of the teachers is consistent in using the same technique
every day. Is it any wonder, then, that many children who were doing fine
in elementary school find themselves lost and confused when they get to
middle school?
When your children make the transition from
fifth to sixth grade (or from sixth to seventh grade), it is perfectly
okay as parents to help them organize themselves and teach them the
necessary skills. In some schools, the teachers themselves teach
organizational skills, but in my experience, the majority of students in
the United States do not learn them well enough, or shall we say early
enough, to help them succeed before they get too far behind.
I think it’s better to assume that
whatever methods they learn in school, while not necessarily incorrect,
will just scratch the surface of what I will try to outline for you here.
As a postscript, although you should help your children learn these study
skills yourself, you should also put pressure on the school to teach them
as well. Many fine schools devote an entire class to study and
organizational skills because they don’t count on individual teachers’
being able to cover all the skills students will need to succeed.
The first thing your child will need is the
proper set of school supplies. Of course these supplies vary greatly from
school to school, and even from teacher to teacher. I don’t want to
devote a great deal of space to school supplies in this chapter, but if
you want a quick refresher course, I have included information on
backpacks, binders, paper, homework notebooks, and basic school supplies
in Appendix B at the back of this book. Feel free to flip through this
section if you need to.
Homework Notebook
There is one item so valuable that I will
discuss it here in greater detail than I do in Appendix B, and that is the
homework notebook. There is no general agreement as to whether the
homework notebook should be a little tiny notepad, a calendar-sized daily
planner, or a full-sized notebook, but I do think it should be its own
separate entity and not simply a section of the three-ring binder. I say
this because the three-ring binder is a big, clunky item that no child is
going to want to take out of his bookbag if he doesn’t have to. Imagine:
The class is just ending, your child has already put his big notebook
away, but suddenly the teacher says, "Whoops, I almost forgot–be
sure to do exercises one through ten in your grammar book." If it’s
a choice of dragging out the binder or just saying to himself "Oh,
I’ll remember . . ." (which has an almost zero probability), he
will probably opt for the latter. On the other hand, if your child has a
smaller and more easily accessible notebook, he is much more likely simply
to pull it out of his backpack and copy down the homework assignment.
At least while your child is a sixth- and
seventh-grader, I would recommend organizing the notebook with him (not
for him) so that you train him well and leave him with a lifetime of good
study skills and habits. Before school starts, suggest that your child
design a chart for each week of the first few months of school. This chart
can be formatted in any number of ways, but you want to be sure to have
the dates and days of the week in the left column with a few spaces
between each one, and a place for all five subjects across the top. If the
notebook is shaped like a rectangle, have your child use the short side
for the days and dates and the long side for the subjects. A sample
notebook might look like this:
Once you have taken the time to set up this
notebook with your child, the important part of the routine is to check it
every day for the first week of school to make sure that your child is in
fact writing down every assignment. After that week, tell your child in a
nice way that you reserve the right to check his homework notebook at any
time.
I think the hardest statement for parents
to deal with is "But Mom, I don’t have any homework." To get
around this fabrication, I would require that your child fill out the
whole chart every day. If there is no homework for a certain class, you
should have him write in "No homework" rather than just leaving
the space blank. That way you can at least check with a particular teacher
if you see a pattern of not writing down the homework.
A major advantage of a calendar-style
planner (available at stationery stores, or any office-supply store like
Office Max, Staples, or Office Depot) is the ability to "log in"
the future due dates of long-range assignments, term papers, exam dates,
et cetera.
Although setting up a homework notebook
seems simple, I can almost guarantee that children who get into the habit
of keeping close track of all assignments early on will be much more
successful students than those who rely on memory or on asking other
students in the class.
With technology becoming even more
accessible in classrooms across the country, some schools have Web pages
that can be accessed at home and at school so teachers can post their
nightly homework for all to see. If your school does this, it is a great
backup method to compare your child’s written homework notebook with the
Web syllabus so you can have the most updated information.
You need to impress upon your child the
importance of taking a minute toward the end of the school day to look at
the night’s homework assignments so he can figure out which books he
will need to bring home. In fact, it is a very good idea, at least in the
younger grades, to have your child add a column to the homework pad that
reads "Books needed" so that he can quickly scan down and figure
out that he can’t do his math homework without the math textbook, for
example. Although it sounds painfully obvious, anyone who has had kids or
dealt with students on a daily basis knows that one of the most common
excuses for not being able to do homework is "Oh, I can’t do my
reading because I left the book in school."
At the very least, students need to bring
home all notebooks (the three-ring binder, the homework notebook, plus
math or any other subject that has one) and then the appropriate
textbooks. Finally, you might want to make it a rule that loose pieces of
paper have no place in the backpack since they only get ripped to shreds
or lost. At least while your children are young, you may want to check
their backpacks every few days to make sure there is some order and
neatness. No need to nag them; just let them know you reserve the right to
check their backpack periodically. Insist that once homework assignments
are completed, they must be clipped back into the binder or, in the case
of a spiral notebook, into a folder for that subject so that they are not
floating around in the backpack.
One further note about going through your
child’s backpack: By the time a child is in sixth grade, he has the
right of privacy. Therefore you should assure your child that you will not
read personal notes from his friends or go through his notebook page by
page.
Leaving Books in School
There are ways to reduce the risk of your
children leaving books in school. One extreme measure is to buy an extra
copy of the heaviest, bulkiest textbooks to keep at home; yet this is
costly and many public schools don’t even have enough to go around in
the first place. However, even if you can’t afford to buy an extra
textbook, there is another way at least to minimize the number of days a
week your child will need to carry the book home. Assuming that the
teacher is organized and assigns work in advance, if your child brings
home the textbook for a certain subject on a Friday, he can actually
complete the assignments for Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday of the
following week so that he does not necessarily need to bring the book home
unless there is a test that needs to be studied for. As we will see in
later chapters, getting ahead or reading ahead in several subjects is one
of the keys for later academic success.
Some teachers allow students to use a
"buddy system" rather than transport back and forth five or six
heavy textbooks every day: Two buddy students bring a certain heavy
textbook to school on alternate days, and then they sit next to each other
in the classroom so they can share their class copy.
If you actually pick up your child at
school every day (and I realize that the majority of students will take
the bus, but this advice is for those who don’t), there is no excuse to
leave a book at school because you can remind your child to check which
books will be necessary to complete the night’s homework before you
leave the campus. Finally, money permitting, it’s not a bad idea to
invest in a basic fax machine (around $150 to $200) so students in your
children’s class can fax any missed assignments. Many reasonably priced
fax machines also have a copying capability; you’d be surprised how
often your child will need to photocopy something that is homework
related!
Missing School
One thing you will need to teach your
children early on is that if they miss school for any reason, it is their
responsibility to find out what the homework was. If you know your child
is home sick for the day, remind him to call teachers himself for the
assignments if he’s well enough to do the homework. Good teachers expect
to be called and often call home if they know a child is sick (if they
don’t have a huge class load like many public-school teachers, a
situation that makes a phone call home almost an impossibility). If it is
hard to reach the teachers at the school, your child should compile a list
at the beginning of each school year of two children in each of his
classes with their phone numbers. These children can either be friends or
just very bright and reliable children (most teachers would be happy to
recommend a student who they know always does the homework so that they
don’t have to be called every time someone misses school). After the
school day, you should encourage your child to call this list (hopefully
we are only talking about one or two calls, since usually children share
several classes) to find out: (1) what they did in every class that day
and (2) what the homework is.
There will be cases when your child really
can’t do the homework because the lesson is impossible without the class
instruction, but at the very least the child should attempt it in order to
have an idea of what was covered so that he does not feel hopelessly
behind when he returns to school. Once your child returns to school, you
should train him to talk to every single teacher to explain why he was
absent and to ask how he can make up the work. This kind of responsibility
at an early age impresses teachers and also prepares students for the
years of school ahead. It also teaches them the lesson that missing school
does not mean missing work or being allowed to skip something; in fact, it
means doing more work to make up what was missed.
The Locker
The only topic we have not covered that has
to do with organization is the school locker, assuming your school is like
most and has lockers. In terms of developing a procedure, it is a good
idea to give your children sometime at beginning of sixth grade a quick
lesson in organizing their locker at the beginning of the day. Their first
step is making an extra copy of their schedule so that one copy stays in
their notebook at all times and the other can be posted right inside the
locker’s door. This way, your child never loses track of exactly where
he is supposed to be at any given time of day.
Next, your child should empty his backpack
and impose some order: perhaps textbooks in one section of the locker and
notebooks in another. Then the backpack can be hung up for the day on a
hook and your child can carry all books he will need before lunch in his
arms, then all books he will need after lunch in the second load (if the
locker is centrally located). On those occasions when parents are invited
into the school for parent-teacher conferences or for open-school nights,
it is a good idea to glance inside your child’s locker to get a sense of
how well he is organizing himself; that is, no loose papers, no rampant
disorganization or sloppiness.
Although it may seem like a lot of work on
your part to help your children learn how to organize their school days,
children carry these habits with them for the rest of their school lives
and beyond, so that you will not have to repeat every step every year.
Once your children have the organizational tools for success, your job
shifts from organizational coach to progress checker, so that all you have
to do is touch base once or twice a week to make sure that homework is
getting done and that your child is upholding his side of the bargain in
school.
Now that we have covered these basic
organizational skills, we turn to the crucial process of creating an
environment at home that encourages students to succeed academically.
Copyright © 2000 by by Michele A. Hernández
Excerpt posted with permission from http://www.twbookmark.com
Many thanks to Time Warner
Bookmark (Little, Brown & Company, Warner Books, A Time Warner
Company) at: www.twbookmark.com.
We appreciate their cooperation with OfSpirit.com to share this chapter of
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empowerment.
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