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Child Care
Family Reading Groups
Young Opinion
Parent Teacher Relationships
Mothers Role
Fathers Role
Limitationf Of Counselling With Retarded Readers
Brothers Role
Friends Role
Medicines
Computer In Child Education
Parental Involvement In The Teaching Of Reading
Home Education
Development During Years Seven Eight And Nine
Toys
Understanding Children Through Doll Play
Mother Milk
First Opening Eyes
Brain Education
Feeding Bottle
Child Health Care
Diseases
General Child Education
Children Growth
Child Activities
Parents Role
Baby Care
Teachers Role
Development During Preschool Years
Changing Childhoods Changing Minds
Childrens Behavior At School
 

 



 

That Their Parents:

That Their Parents Children learn first and foremost from their parents. In this respect all parents are teachers - and very effective teachers they are. Arguably, children learn more from their parents in the first five years of life than they do from their schools in the next ten. This book is about parents and teachers working together to help children with their learning; more specifically, it is about parents co-operating with teachers over their own children's reading. We have chosen the term PACT (Parents, Children and Teachers) to embody this concept.

It cannot be stressed enough that their parents the school is entering into a partnership, and that their parents the parents with whom this partnership is to be formed have their own opinions and feelings, which need into account. Teachers will find it possible to devise a set of guidelines for use by parents which they can feel perfectly confident about sharing. In our experience, though, there are one or two temptations to beware of One is to make your advice to parents much too complex, because of anxiety about parents getting it 'wrong'.


Children do have all kinds of pressures put on them parents but in our experience, when the school and hoi work closely together, these pressures can be, relieved. But t school must get its contribution across to parents clearly, aj continue, often over a long period of time, to help tho parents who particularly need its support. Children whose parents aren't interested Parents who genuinely aren't interested in their children education must be quite hard to find; we haven't met any ye though doubtless they must exist. Where the school takes th trouble to contact aJl its parents, the rate of take-up on th home reading schemes we have described is extremely higr.
 
 

 

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