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You are here: Family Magazine >
Education > How to Handle
a Poor Report Card
How to Handle a Poor Report Card
Tips for Helping Your Children When They Are Struggling To Get Good
Grades By Sylvan Learning Centers of Pinellas County
It's that time of the school year again - report card time. While many students
will come home with good grades, many others would rather stuff their report
cards deep into their backpacks than show them to their parents. As parents, you
want your child to do well in school, so what do you do when your child's report
card isn't as good as it should be?
Sylvan offers the following tips for dealing with a poor report card:
- Set expectations.
Not every child will earn all A's, but that doesn't mean your child should
strive for less. Talk with your child before the school year starts and
explain that you won't be upset if he doesn't bring home all A's, but that
you will be upset if he doesn't try his hardest and doesn't ask for help.
- Communicate with your child.
Don't wait until report cards are issued to talk with your child about
school and grades. Talk with her every night and every week about homework.
Ask how she is doing in school and what subjects she finds challenging.
- Discuss your child's performance with his teacher and/or guidance
counselor.
Your child's teacher and/or guidance counselor is the best source for
information about your child's scholastic performance. Your child's teacher
can recommend ways to help your child or point out difficulties he is
having. His guidance counselor can provide progress reports between reports
cards or help set up additional
parent-teacher conferences when necessary.
- Set goals for improvement with your child.
If your child is currently a C student, then setting a goal of getting all
A's may not be reasonable. However, creating an improvement goal for each
subject will help her work toward an attainable level for each class.
- Establish a study plan with your child.
Your child should keep a schedule of all classes, assignments and key dates
(e.g., project deadlines, big exams, etc). As part of that schedule, she
should include specific time for studying, projects and extracurricular
activities. The more comprehensive the schedule, the more efficient your
child will be in completing her homework and the better she'll do in school.
- Seek outside help.
Some children may need additional attention that can't be provided in
school. Speak with your child's teacher about
tutoring or supplemental
education providers to help your child work towards better grades in school.
- Praise your child's successes.
Praise your child for what he is doing well, whether it's a specific
academic subject or an extracurricular activity. If your child is not doing
well in English, but loves to read the latest Harry Potter book, show him
the connection between the two.
Sylvan Learning is the leading provider of tutoring to students of all ages,
grades and skill levels with over 30 years of experience and more than 850
centers located throughout North America. Sylvan's trained and
Sylvan-certified personal instructors provide individualized instruction in
reading, writing, mathematics, study skills and test-prep for college
entrance and state exams. For more information, call 1-800-31-SUCCESS or
visit www.SylvanLearning.com.
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