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Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools
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Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Dec 26, 2015

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Beverley Hudson
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Page 1: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Improving Study Skills

Family and School Partnerships

Communications and Community OutreachFairfax County Public Schools

Page 2: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Learning Styles Quiz Before the session begins, take a few

minutes to check the items that best describe your child (see the last page).

We will refer back to this later in the session.

Page 3: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Agenda What are study skills? Setting goals Organizing time and space Learning styles Matching study strategies to learning

styles

Page 4: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Lifelong Learners Are excited about

learning.

Develop habits of study that will help in adult life.

Know their own learning strengths.

Page 5: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

What Are Study Skills? Strategies students use to help them

learn: Setting goals Organizing time and space Studying for tests

Can be applied to all subjects.

Learning how to learn.

Page 6: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Setting Goals Students who set goals are more likely to

be successful. They don’t jump into a project without

thinking it through.

Page 7: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Help your student- Set short-term goals—for each study

session.

Set long-term goals—for large projects, final exams.

Page 8: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Organizing Time

Student commits to regular study time based on family schedule and need for breaks and rest.

Student uses the time to read or review even when there is “no homework.”

Page 9: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Keeps planner for tracking assignments.

Limits distractions during study time.

Balances recreational computer and phone use with study.

Page 10: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Organizing Space

Choose place to study based on student’s need for quiet or for company.

Stock up on supplies needed for assignments.

Some children stay focused better if adult is nearby reading or doing quiet work.

Page 11: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Parent-Child Agreement

I, ___________________, am going to make a special effort to use my time and place to study. The place where I will study is: ___________________________________________

The times when I plan to study are flexible, but best times are:

MondayTuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Weekend

Student’s Signature/Date ___________________

Parent’s Signature/Date ____________________

Page 12: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Matching Learning Styles to Study Strategies Learning can occur through many different

channels.

Each of us has strengths and challenges in learning.

We have preferred ways to learn.

Let’s look at three ways to learn or “learning styles.”

Page 13: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Three Channels for LearningVisual Memory Access

Kinesthetic Memory Access

Auditory Memory Access

Page 14: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Learning styles are developmental-

Infants through grade one are kinesthetic.

By second grade visual skills are more fine tuned.

Auditory skills are stronger by sixth grade.

Page 15: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Learning Styles Most children are a blend of styles.

How children prefer to learn may differ from how they prefer to show you what they learned.

Page 16: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Visual Learners Learn best by seeing words in books, on the

board, in charts, or in workbooks.

Remember and use information best that they read.

Often close their eyes to visualize or remember.

Page 17: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Visual Learners

Remember faces, rather than names.

Find quiet, passive surrounding ideal.

Are attracted to written or spoken language rich in pictorial imagery.

Page 18: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Implications for Learning Write down words that they

hear.

Take notes.

Look at illustrations, videos.

Use cameras, art supplies, 3-dimensional materials.

Page 19: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Auditory Learners

Learn from hearing words spoken.

May read aloud or subvocalize as they read.

Remember names, tend to forget faces.

Page 20: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Auditory Learners Remember by verbalizing lessons to themselves.

May have difficulty reading maps or diagrams or handling conceptual assignments like mathematics.

Are adept at discriminating sounds.

Do better in a noisy environment than do visual learners.

Page 21: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Implications for Learning Rehearse information

orally.

Use rhymes, jingles, and auditory repetition through tape recording.

Read directions aloud, or have someone read them aloud.

Page 22: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Kinesthetic Learners Learn best through

experience, touching, manipulating, and moving.

Require a combination of stimuli (manipulating material along with the seeing and hearing)

Page 23: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Kinesthetic Learners Need to be active and take frequent breaks.

Speak with their hands and with gestures.

Remember what was done, but have difficulty recalling what was said or seen.

Page 24: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Implications for Learning Keep verbal information short and to the

point.

Use practice, play acting, and modeling to prepare for tests.

Allow for physical movement and periodic breaks during tests, while reading, or while composing written assignments.

Page 25: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

I like to draw pictures to help me study.

I like crossing items off my “To Do” list.

I get more work done on my bed by the window.

Don’t give me any work to do before 9:00 a.m.!

Katie

I’ll ask my teacher for a copy of her notes.

Page 26: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Test-taking Strategies Encourage your child to use the learning

channels that work best for him.  Turn statements from notes and texts into

questions and practice the answers.

Draw pictures and icons or make up mnemonics (memory devices).

Connect information to real-life experiences.

Page 27: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Test-taking Strategies If needed, review test material with your child.

Survey the chapter to get an overview of the materials covered.

Discuss any questions at the end of the chapter .

Review class notes.

Page 28: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Test-taking Strategies Help your child manage study time. 

Help your child set specific study goals. Plan a short break during studying.

Avoid last-minute cramming by encouraging your child to review notes daily.

 

Page 29: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Test-taking Strategies Encourage your child to have a positive

outlook about the test.

Children who are afraid of failing are more likely to become anxious when taking tests and more likely to make mistakes.

Make sure that your child is well-rested, especially the day of a test.

Page 30: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

Don’t judge a child on the basis of a single test score.

Test scores are not perfect measures of what a child can do. Remember that one test is simply one test.

Page 31: Improving Study Skills Family and School Partnerships Communications and Community Outreach Fairfax County Public Schools.

DiscussionDiscuss in a small group or with a partner:

What is your child’s learning style?

Share the challenges in your home regarding study habits.

Group discussion: Q and A with speaker