Study Skills for Middle School and Beyond
Your child has a better chance of succeeding in college if she masters school survival
skills now. Here's how you can help her get organized and learn to study effectively.
"Be sure to study for the test on Friday," one of your
child's teachers is
certain to say some day soon.
Does your child know how?
While many teachers spend some class time teaching study skills, it's not unusual
for students to need more guidance than they get in the classroom. In middle school,
there's more homework, it becomes more difficult and it requires analytical skills
your child may not have developed yet.
The study skills your child needs to do well on her test on Friday are the same
ones she will need to succeed in high school and college: getting organized, taking
good notes and studying effectively.
As your child moves toward independence, she's less likely to ask for your advice.
She will need to go through some trial and error to come up with the strategies
most compatible with her learning style. And you'll want to encourage her to take
responsibility for her own school work. You can help her by monitoring homework,
asking questions and helping her evaluate what works for her — and what doesn't.
Helping Your Child Get Organized
Getting organized is crucial for your child, says Linda Winburn, a veteran South
Carolina middle school teacher who became the state's 2005 Teacher of the Year.
"And the key is parent involvement."
Some tips to help your child get organized:
- Provide a place to study. It doesn't have to
'Did You Do Your Homework?'
Parents need to ask more questions than this one, teachers advise. How much should
you help with homework?
Monitor homework but remember it's your child's homework, not yours. You can help
by asking questions that help guide your child to his own solutions. Some examples:
- What information do you need to do this assignment?
- Where are you going to look for it?
- Where do you think you should begin?
- What do you need to do next?
- Can you describe how you're going to solve this problem?
- How did you solve this problem?
- What did you try that didn't work?
- Why does this answer seem right to you?
- Tell me more about this part?
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be a desk, says Winburn. "A kitchen counter is a great place, especially if mom's
in the kitchen cooking."
The desk or table surface should be big enough so that your student can spread out
papers and books. Make sure essential supplies such as pens, paper and calculator
are close by. Have good lighting and a sturdy chair that's the right height available.
- Help your child develop a system to keep track of important
papers. If your child tends to forget to turn in homework or can't quite
keep track of how he's doing in a class, it might help to get him a binder with
a folder in the front for completed work ready to be turned in and a folder in the
back for papers returned by the teacher.
"For me, staying organized meant creating a system — any system — and sticking to
it," says Gabriela Kipnis, now a student at the University of Pennsylvania. "I had
fun color-coding and organizing using dividers, but the truth is, all that mattered
was that there was a method that I stuck with."
- Make sure your child has — and uses — a planner to keep track
of assignments. Help your child get in the habit of writing down each daily
assignment in each subject and checking it off when it's complete. Some schools
provide these to students, and if not, you might want to work with your PTA or parent
organization to provide planners at your school.
- Encourage your child to estimate how long each assignment
will take. He can then plan a realistic schedule, building in study breaks
after subjects that are most challenging, and allowing for soccer games and band
practice. Helping your child keep track of time spent studying — rather than staring
at a blank page — will help him learn to connect time spent on schoolwork with school
success.
- Help your child break big projects into smaller ones.
A big research project will seem less overwhelming and will be less likely to be
left until the last minute if it's done in manageable chunks, each with its own
deadline.
- Communicate with your child's teachers. If your child
is struggling with organizational skills, talk to the school counselor or teachers
about what might be causing the problems and brainstorm approaches to solve them.
Studying for Tests
Studying for tests is a skill. For struggling students, it's a mystery.
Parents can help their children manage their time and attention — which means turning
of the cell phone, the TV and the iPod, says Burke.
Some tips to remember in helping your child:
- Rereading isn't the same as learning. "Reviewing alone
is not enough, says Kipnis, the UPenn student, reflecting on what she has learned
along the way. "Thinking of potential essay questions and outlining them or working
out the challenging math problems helps me learn how to apply the material so that
I do not blank when I see the questions on the test."
"For math and sciences, a big problem that I had was that I would spend a lot of
time reviewing the concepts, but I wouldn't learn them because I was not practicing
applying the concepts," she says. "I was the most productive when I created sheets
with tons of practice problems and just practiced applying the concept in many different
ways."
There are other ways your student can practice this kind of active learning — highlighting
his notes, using Post-its to mark key textbook passages, making study cards, and
mapping and diagramming concepts.
- Which is best: morning, afternoon or evening? Everyone
focuses better at some times of the day than others. Help your child find the times
that his efforts will be most effective.
- Sometimes we just have to memorize. You may have used
a mnemonic like Roy G. Biv to remember the colors of the rainbow (red, orange, yellow,
green, blue, indigo, violet) or My Very Educated Mother Just Sent Us Nine Pizzas
to remember the correct order of the planets, back when Pluto was still considered
the ninth one. Inventing your own silly mnemonic together works just as well and
can lighten up a study session.
- Ask questions to help your child distinguish important from
unimportant information. For example, ask: "What's the most important thing
you learned about ...?"
- Remind your child to make the most of his time. If
he always carries a review sheet or book along with him, odd moments — waiting for
the bus, sitting in the doctor's office — can be used as productive study time.
That
leaves more time for a basketball game after school.
- Find out what skills students at your child's grade level
are expected to have. Middle school students are generally expected to have
learned basic multiplication and division facts. If your child can't quickly recall
them, it is likely to affect her scores on math tests. It may be time to go back
and review basic skills.
- Look for other sources of support. Find out the best
way to reach your child's teachers and keep that contact information handy all year.
Is there a college student in your neighborhood who can help with math, a relative
who can tutor him in Spanish? Talk to your child about finding a "study buddy" or
group. Study groups can be effective because students can fill in the gaps in each
other's knowledge and test their understanding of the material by explaining it
to others.
- Help your child reflect on what works. Some questions
you can ask: How do you know when you've studied enough? How did you keep yourself
focused? How much time did you plan to spend and how much did you actually spend?
How would you do this differently next time?
- Help your child de-stress.
Good study skills can help reduce anxiety, and so can relaxation exercises and regular
physical activity. If your child seems unusually stressed about tests, talk to him
about what's making him anxious. If the work seems too difficult for your child
or the workload too great, contact the school.
"Have a conversation with the teacher," says Winburn, the South Carolina teacher.
"Maybe the child doesn't need to be doing 100 problems to practice a concept. Maybe
10 is just fine."
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