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It’s summertime and the living
is easy. That is unless you are a parent trying to figure out how to occupy your
pre-teen over the long summer recess. For lots of reasons this can be a tricky
feat. If you are a working parent, you have the nagging concern about who will
supervise your child while you are away from home. For parents who are home with
their children, the concern can be how to motivate them to keep active and
involved and away from the Play Station.
Summer solutions from
parents
In an effort to make your job a
little easier, we have compiled an assortment of creative suggestions for summer
activities specifically geared to pre-teens. As an added bonus, many of the
following are ways of sneaking a little bit of learning in on your child.
- At the beginning of the
summer sit down with your child and talk about the types of fun activities
they would like to do over the summer. Gather up summer arts and music
schedules, information about local sporting events, pamphlets about local
points of interest and day trips (all available at local malls, supermarkets
and chambers of commerce) to jump-start your discussion. Schedule the dates
on your family calendar to make sure that these special events come to pass.
If there is preplanning involved, enlist your child’s help when gathering
necessary information, making reservations, preparing lists and shopping for
supplies.
- If your child has a friend
whose parent(s) will be staying home with him or her over the summer,
inquire about sharing care-taking responsibilities. This might be a formal
arrangement for which the stay-at-home parent is reimbursed or a creative
one in which you trade off responsibilities for their child during the
evening or on weekends. This type of arrangement can work well for a
pre-teen who is embarrassed about the possibility of spending her summer
with a babysitter. Instead, she can view it as an opportunity to hang out
with a close friend while you are away during the day.
- If your workplace will allow
it, arrange to take your middle schooler to work with you a couple of days a
week. Often there are filing, cleaning or other odd jobs to be done that can
teach your child the basics about your workplace, as well as earn him some
spending money.
- Team up with a local family
that is interested in having a helper to look after their younger children.
An arrangement with a stay-at-home-parent can be mutually beneficial — the
parent gets a much needed break to take care of personal business around the
home while your child can earn some money and practice what she has learned
in her Red Cross babysitting course.
- Look into having your child
perform odd jobs for a local neighbor. As with the babysitting arrangement,
this allows your child to earn some extra spending cash while being
supervised by someone you trust.
- If your child enjoys
cooking, have him plan and prepare a simple meal or special dessert for the
family once a week. Involve him in the planning, shopping and preparation.
This can give parents a well-deserved break from cooking, as well as teach
your child valuable organizational and life-skills. As with any cooking
project, make sure that your child is adept at using the tools he will need
to make the meal. If you will not be in the home while the meal is being
prepared, suggest that it be something that doesn’t involve the use of the
stove, grill or sharp utensils.
Keep the learning going
Just because it’s summer
doesn’t mean learning has to stop. There are many local colleges and service
agencies that offer a wide variety of programs for middle school students during
the summer. Academic enrichment programs range from sports camps or outdoor
adventures, to journalism, music, art, computer skills, science and math
programs and more.
For some great summer academic
enrichment programs, visit the 2001 Edition of "Summer Programs at New York
Colleges for Kids 8-18" online at www.summeroncampus.com
or inquire at the local YMCA, Girls Inc., Boys & Girls Clubs and other
community agencies about the types of summer programs they offer.
Make reading part of your
child’s summer routine
Here are some books that are
current favorites with middle schoolers. For more suggestions, ask other parents
what their children are reading or check with the local library.
- Chicken Soup for the Pet
Lover’s Soul: Stories about Pets as Teachers, Healers, Heroes and Friends.
- Chicken Soup for the
Preteen Soul: 101 Stories of Changes, Choices, and Growing for Kids 9-13.
- Frindle by Andrew
Clements -When he decides to turn his 5th grade teacher’s love of the
dictionary around on her, Nick Allen invents a new word and begins a chain
of events that quickly spirals beyond his control.
- Jeremy Thatcher, Dragon
Hatcher by Bruce Coville - A fantasy novel in which artistically
talented Jeremy Thatcher unknowingly buys a dragon’s egg, hatches it, and
has a life full of unusual problems.
- A Tarantula in My Purse:
And 172 Other Wild Pets by Jean Craighhead George - A collection of
autobiographical stories about raising a houseful of children and wild pets
including crows, skunks and raccoons.
- Redwall
series by Brian Jaques - In this outstanding fantasy series a group of mice
work to defend their abbey against other animal intruders. Luckily, they are
helped by the mouse ghost Martin the Warrior. Great for fans of The
Hobbit, Patricia Wrede’s Dragon series, as well as fans of Bruce
Coville’s novels.
- Stranded by Ben
Mikaelsen - Twelve-year-old Koby, who has lost a foot in an accident, sees a
chance to prove her self-reliance to her parents when she tries to rescue
two pilot whales near her home in the Florida Keys.
- Countdown by Ben
Mikaelsen - In two parallel stories, a 14-year-old boy, who is NASA’s
first Junior Astronaut, and a 14-year-old Maasai herder in Kenya both edge
into maturity while questioning their family traditions. Though the child
astronaut speaks to the Masaai herder often from space, they are definitely
not friendly to each other at first.
- Jip: His Story by
Katherine Paterson - Historical story in which Jip, who believes he is
merely a boy on a poor farm in Vermont (1855-1856), discovers that his true
identity could be dangerous to himself and others.
- Woodsong by Gary
Paulsen - For a rugged outdoor man and his family, life in northern
Minnesota is a wild experience involving wolves, deer and sled dogs.
- The Voyage of the Frog
by Gary Paulsen - An adventure story in which David goes out to his sailboat
to scatter his recently deceased uncle’s ashes on the water. He falls
asleep, drifts out to sea, and is caught in a fierce storm. David must
survive days on his own on the open ocean.
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Capital Region BOCES Communications Service at (518)
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