1 / 27

How can you help your child be successful ?

How can you help your child be successful ?. Part 1 - 8 th grade transitions – parental preparation (Explore Test) Part 2 - A case for participation in athletics. 10 Simple Suggestions for a successful transition to high school. #1 Be involved in your child’s academic program.

jeri
Télécharger la présentation

How can you help your child be successful ?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How can you help your child be successful? • Part 1 - 8th grade transitions – parental preparation (Explore Test) • Part 2 - A case for participation in athletics

  2. 10 Simple Suggestionsfor a successful transition to high school

  3. #1 Be involved in your child’s academic program • Make sure your child is appropriately challenged and taking courses now that will help meet future goals.

  4. #2 Get your child involved in a positive activity but don’t overextend. • Research indicates that students who are involved in an activity, club, sport, music, etc. are more likely to have a positive high school experience and get better grades than students who are not involved.

  5. #3 Know your child’s friends • Comprehensive research says that when a teenager is faced with a critical decision, the influence of peers (positive and negative) has as much influence as that of parents and families.

  6. #4 Get to know your child’s teachers and guidance counselor. • Stay in positive contact with teachers, and don’t be afraid to ask for help. Remember that email is a great tool for quick communication, but it is not a great tool for dealing with more difficult issues. • Conflicts are best resolved in person or over the telephone. • Don’t fight the small battles for your child. Part of high school is fostering self-reliance.

  7. #5 Get involved in the school yourself. • The most successful students I see are those whose parents are (engaged) at the school, attending student games, performances, conferences, etc. • Look for opportunities to get involved in volunteer activities, Music Boosters, Sports Alliance, chaperoning, etc. • Parents who do these things are “in the know” and their children benefit from the connections between home and school.

  8. #6 Remember that all teenagers (including straight-A students) need parent supervision. • Your child should always know that you love him or her, but make sure that he or she knows your expectations. • Know where your child is at all times. • Remember that good kids are capable of making bad decisions. • Supervision includes online supervision and the supervision of technology (i.e. cell phones).

  9. #7 Have a plan. • It is never too early to start planning for life after high school. Successful high school students visualize what they want to accomplish in their lives (even if their plans change often). • Plan backwards. Start with the desired outcome and work backwards.

  10. #8 Get organized. • Successful high school students have a balance of academic, social, family, and extra-curricular demands. This takes parent support and accountability. Their teen brains won’t do this for them. They think they are super-humans. • Adopt procedures and protocols to support your teens (i.e. planners, homework times and places, down time, etc.)

  11. #9 Be concerned if… • Your child takes a dramatic downturn in school performance. • He or she loses interest in things normally enjoyed. • He or she begins avoiding friends or family for extended periods of time. • Your child is constantly worried or anxious. • Your child is using drugs or alcohol.

  12. #10 More reasons to be concerned… • Your child seems emotionally out of control (extreme anger, sadness, hopelessness, etc.) • Your child hurts other people (or themselves), destroys property, or breaks the law • Your child seems “addicted” to technology (cell phone, Facebook, video games, etc.) • Adolescents are tough to read. If you have questions about whether your child is “typical” or “troubled,” we can help you sort that out.

  13. Part 2 – Benefits of participation in athletics • Students who participate generally have higher GPA’s • Better Attendance Records • Lower Dropout rates • Fewer discipline problems • (numerous studies including Women’s Sport’s Foundation, Minnesota High School Athletic Association, North Dakota High School Athletic Association, NFHS, University of Chicago, & Iowa High School Athletic Association)

  14. Activities are Inherently Educational • Programs provide valuable lessons for practical situations – teamwork, sportsmanship, winning and losing, and hard work. • Students learn self-discipline, build self-confidence, and develop skills to handle competitive situations. • Participation in HS activities is a predictor of later success – college, career, societal contribution

  15. Case Studies • Students who spend no time in extracurricular activities are 49% more likely to use drugs and 37% more likely to become teen age parents – US Dept of Educ. • Participation in activities appears to be one of the few interventions that benefit low-status, disadvantaged students – Harvard Ed Review • About 80% of CEOs in the province of Alberta participated in school sports. Typical participation rates in Alberta is 30-35%

  16. Case Studies Continued • 95% of Fortune 500 executives participated in high school athletics. (Fortune Magazine) • 47% of Fortune 500 executives were National Honor Society members. (Fortune Magazine)

  17. Esko - The class of 2006 • Male Participant GPA – 3.028 • Male Non-Participant GPA – 2.739 • Female Participant GPA – 3.331 • Female Non-Participant GPA – 2.725 • Overall: • 72.34% involved with an average GPA of 3.202 • 27.66% Not involved with an average GPA of 2.732

  18. The class of 2007 • Male Participant GPA – 3.115 • Male Non-Participant GPA – 2.523 • Female Participant GPA – 3.359 • Female Non-Participant GPA – 2.781 • Overall: • 80.43% involved with an average GPA of 3.260 • 19.57% Not involved with an average GPA of 2.652

  19. The class of 2008 • Male Participant GPA – 3.249 • Male Non-Participant GPA – 2.148 • Female Participant GPA – 3.253 • Female Non-Participant GPA – 2.737 • Overall: • 80.41% involved with an average GPA of 3.251 • 19.59% Not involved with an average GPA of 2.442

  20. The class of 2009 • Male Participant GPA – 3.220 • Male Non-Participant GPA – 2.473 • Female Participant GPA – 3.618 • Female Non-Participant GPA – 2.694 • Overall: • 71.43% involved with an average GPA of 3.446 • 28.57% Not involved with an average GPA of 2.558

  21. 2006-2009 Senior GPAs

  22. Class of 2010 Senior Survey • Plans After Graduation? • 5% Technical Program • 36% Two Year Program • 53% Four Year College (43 Students) • 3% Military • 4% Employment • Of the 43 Students going to a four year college 77% were student athletes.

  23. FACT • WE ARE ON THE SAME TEAM! – collaboration with parents is intentional. • Esko students athletes are better prepared for secondary opportunities than the average student. • Esko student athletes miss fewer days of school and have fewer disciplinary problems than average students.

  24. My Reality • 1-3% of the overall district budget is attributed to athletics… money well spent! • In general student athletes get far more out of sports than the sport gets out of them!

  25. Success breeds success! • Which comes first? • A strong athletic and fine arts program or district wide academic success? • True Team – Byron, Osakis, etc…

  26. The purpose? • BEING PROACTIVE!! • Be intentional about the things you want. • Collaborating with parents • The more often they here you say we are here to help your student be successful – the more likely they are going to believe it.

  27. Together in Success…

More Related