LD OnLine

Study Skills - A Handout for Parents

(1998)

Many capable children at all grade levels experience frustration and failure in school, not because they lack ability, but because they do not have adequate study skills. Good study habits are important for success in school, to foster feelings of competence, to develop positive attitudes, and to help children realize they can control how well they do in school and in life. Good study habits lay the groundwork for successful work habits as an adult.

For children to learn good study skills, teachers and parents must work together. It is most important to help children build good habits, to develop a system that works for an individual child, and to use the system effectively and consistently. Preferred learning styles vary from child to child. Children need to discover how they learn and then work out a study system that fits best. Parents of elementary aged children usually help their children more than parents of adolescents. However, adolescents also need parental support and encouragement throughout high school.

Four basic principles to enhance study skills.

  1. Make homework completion a positive experience: associate it with love and affection, freedom, fun and control.
  2. Make homework completion a high priority.
  3. Use homework completion to teach organization skills and improve learning skills. Remember that the primary purpose of homework is to improve learning and foster work habits.
  4. Provide and enforce logical and meaningful consequences.

Make homework completion a positive experience

Associate it with love and affection, freedom, fun, and control. Possible ways to do this are:

Make homework completion a high priority

Use homework completion to teach organization skills and improve learning

Keep in mind that the primary purpose of homework is to improve learning and foster work habits. Possible ways to do this are to:

Provide and enforce logical and meaningful consequences

Resources

Canter, L. (1993). Homework without tears. New York: HarperCollins.

How to help your child achieve in school (1988). Pueblo, CO: Consumer Information Center (Dept 109M).

Rosemond. J. (1990). Ending the homework hassle: Understanding, preventing and solving school performance problems. Andrews & McMeel.

Mack, A. (1997). A+ Parents: Help your child learn and succeed in school. McBooks.