5 Ways To Improve Your Child's Grades

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By Dolores Monet

Everyone wants their child to do well in school. Good grades impact a child’s self image and increase self-confidence. The ability to learn and study at an early age improves a person’s chances of success in life. Verbal fluency, problem solving skills, and mathematical proficiency will all effect your child’s future.

A child that learns to follow the rules and achieve success at an early age is a child that will be able to reach his or her full potential and gain the skills needed to go to college.

Here are 5 Rules that will improve grades and achievement tests for most children. The suggestions are simple methods that allow you to influence the way that your learns and behaves in the classroom.

(stock.xchng)
(stock.xchng)

Improve your child's grades with 5 simple steps that are free and easy to implement.

1) Read. Children who are read to frequently form a young age develop eye movement skills that allow them to process the printed word. Reading encourages a child to create mental images and develop abstract thinking. If reading is a pleasant habit, the reading necessary for education becomes an ingrained and enjoyable process.

2) Turn off the TV. The average American child watches 3 – 5 hours of TV a day. Studies show that avid TV watchers earn lower scores on achievement tests and suffer language deficits. Children learn through mulitsensory interaction. The passive behavior of TV watching inhibits brain development and the eye movement skills needed to understand printed material. Quickly shifting images create shorter attention spans leading to learning problems in school. The child who rarely watches TV rarely complains of boredom.

3) Exercise. The lack of exercise, fresh air and sunshine can lead to depression, anxiety and obesity. Free play outdoors encourages creativity, problems solving skills and develops a child’s sense of self-sufficiency. Running wild refreshes their minds and blows off steam so they are ready to learn.

4) Nutrition. Breakfast before school famously effects school performance. But it’s not just about eating, it’s also what’s for breakfast. Sugary foods leave a child hungry midday while protein and fiber keep their stomachs satisfied until lunch. Appropriate brain function depends on adequate nutrition. Studies show that lack of protein, minerals and vitamins effect achievement scores and behavior.

5) Sleep. Doctors recommend 11 hours of sleep for children aged 7 – 12. Lack of adequate sleep leads to obesity and interferes with the ability to concentrate and process information. A well rested child is alert, responsive and cheerful.

So, before you run your child off to the doctor or turn report card day into a battle, follow these simple rules. You may hear complaints over life-style changes but in a few weeks you will see improvements in schoolwork, health and the general happiness of your child.

Loss of Sleep

Recent studies have suggested that sleep apnea is more widespread in children than previously thought. Sleep apnea is a condition in which the sleeper momentarily stops breathing and subsequently wakes up, interrupting needed rest and deep sleep.

Sleep apnea is often caused by obesity and/or weak muscles in the neck and throat area. The loss of sleep due to sleep apnea can lead to fatigue and  the inability to concentrate.

If a child snores, he or she may have sleep apnea. Some doctors have performed tonsillectomies on such children as it was thought that tonsil swelling caused the problem. The children  who suffered sleep apnea and were given tonsillectomies experienced dramatic behavioral and mood changes. Children's behavior problems disappeared. Children with focus problems, mood problems, and poor achievement improved within weeks of the surgery.

In recent years, there has been an increase in ADD and related difficulties among school age children. Years ago, tonsillectomies were routinely performed. Some pediatricians suggest that the decrease of tonsillectomy procedure is related to the increase in childrens' behavior problems, mood problems, and attention problems and is illustrated by the recent spate of sleep apnea related tonsillectomy.

All which underscores the importance of a good night's sleep.


Comments

scottaye73 profile image

scottaye73 3 years ago

Nice hub, I think you did a very good job on this! Have a great night. ~ Scott

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 3 years ago

Thank you for commenting, Scott, I appreciate your visit to my hub.

jayjay40 profile image

jayjay40 2 years ago

If only all parents followed these rules children would be so much more happier. A well written hub.

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 2 years ago

jayjay, I was thinking about how well a kid does in school when I wrote it but you are right, they would be a lot happier!

dnrkrishnan25 profile image

dnrkrishnan25 2 years ago

nice article...

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 2 years ago

Thank you, dnrkrishnan!

LearningWorks profile image

LearningWorks 19 months ago

Excellent! You have offered some very important insights into what children need to thrive. I was particularly interested in the tie between sleep and behavior, and the connection some pediatricians suggest between the decrease of tonsillectomy procedures (to correct sleep apnea) and the increase in childrens' behavior problems, mood problems, and attention problems. This makes a great deal of sense. Reading to our children is very important too, as well as limiting TV watching and making sure they play outdoors and eat healthy, not sugary foods. Well done.

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 19 months ago

Thank you very much, Learning. I know people who allow little babies to watch TV, a terrible thing, it can really affect their brains. I was so surprised to read about the sleep apnea thing but it does make sense. Think about how you feel when you don't get enough sleep, you just can't focus.

Treasuresofheaven profile image

Treasuresofheaven Level 1 Commenter 17 months ago

Good read. My teenagers are getting about 8 hours a night -- think they need more. Thanks for your research.

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 17 months ago

Treasures - thank you. Everyone needs the proper amount of sleep. I know that I can't think or work properly without rest, and children are growing!

tnvrstar profile image

tnvrstar 15 months ago

I don't have child but it will definitely help my young brother ;)

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 15 months ago

tnvrstarr - well a family has to work together! I bet your brother would love to have you read a book to him. The younger brothers so look up to the older ones. Thanks!

antimapathak 5 months ago

very well written and i will definitely try these rules for my 5 year old son, thanks, will update if i see some good change

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet Hub Author 5 months ago

antimapathak - thank you! It sure helped with my kids. People used to try to make me feel mean, limiting TV, limiting junk food (none in the house), and getting them to bed in time so that they'd get a good night's sleep. It all makes a difference.

Rashid 4 months ago

Dear,

Thanks a lot for good advice

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