Back-to-school guide: 4 great ways to get kids ready for the school year
Photo above by Aaron Burden used by permission via Unsplash.
Back-to-school season is here, and there are some easy ways to help your child get ready for school this year. Whether or not your child has experienced some learning loss due to the pandemic, it’s valuable to use the final weeks of the summer to begin prepping for school.
A bit of reading, writing and readiness-checking can help put kids back in an academic mindset and get them excited for the school days ahead.
Here are four easy moves your family can make:
1. End summer with a reading challenge. You may have already participated in the Carnegie Library’s Summer Reading 2022 campaign. But whether or not you’ve done that, you can immerse your kids in fun reading for the final weeks of summer. One approach: Visit the library and let each child choose two books they want to finish before school starts. You can plan that if they finish those two with days to spare before the first day of school, you’ll head back to the library and take out two more!
2. Use a fun tool to discover math/reading readiness. Learning Heroes offers a really helpful and free tool for school-age kids. The Readiness Check (available in English and Spanish) offers just a few questions related to reading or math, and the results can help you see how prepared your kids may be for the grade they’re about to begin. You can sit with them as they do the Readiness Check, so you’re aware of how easy or hard it is for them to do grade-level tasks. Once you get the results, you’ll be pointed toward free online resources to practice the skills your child will need this year.
3. Plan an end-of-summer craft project. Our Maker Monday videos are filled with projects you can do with items you likely have around the house. These do-it-yourself craft projects were designed by folks at the Children’s Museum of Pittsburgh, and they include projects for young kids and older kids. Have kids help choose a project they want to do and then ask them to help assemble the supplies. Then, as they’re doing the project, you can talk about how fun it will be to get back into a classroom and do creative projects there. This might be a great moment for kids to talk about their feelings ahead of the first day of school — what they’re excited about and what they might be a bit nervous about.
4. Encourage kids to tell their own story. Here’s a wonderful way to get kids thinking, drawing and writing as they get ready for school this year: Use one of Kidsburgh’s free storytelling templates.
- Our Fun Facts About Me storytelling template (print or download right here) gives young kids space to draw a self-portrait and answer fun questions about themselves. Once kids are finished, you might even want to bring the page with you on the first day of school to share with your child’s teacher. (And if you wish, you’re welcome to email a scan or photo of the finished page to us here at Kidsburgh — we’d love to publish some of these!)
- Our basic Question/Answer template (print or download right here) lets you pose a question to your child. It can be something like “What was the best thing that happened this summer?” or “What do you hope you learn about this year at school?” or something like “What do you think the world will be like in 20 years?” (You can also have siblings or friends pose questions to each other, or let a child choose their own questions to write about.) Here’s how the template works: Write the question in the top box and then let your child run wild. Depending on their age, they can write a story or draw pictures, or do a mix of both. And they don’t have to stick to just one page. You can staple additional blank or lined pages to the back of this single-page template. Or you can staple multiple copies of the template together to ask your child a range of questions.
Whatever your child writes or draws about, these templates are a starting point for using their imaginations and working on writing and thinking skills.