Thursday 10 May 2012

Tips on How To Prepare Your Kid for Exam

Parents and families can help to create a positive test-taking experience and help students prepare for exams.. Here are some ideas.  

Throughout the Year
  • Make sure your child gets enough sleep, eats properly, and gets to school on time. During exam time, make this a special effort.
  • Encourage your child to READ, READ, READ. No activity is linked to academic success as much as reading. Even the math portion on the exam uses word problems to test problem-solving ability.
  • Write exam dates on your home calendar.
  • Talk with your child's teacher(s) often to see what you can do at home to support your child's work in school. Review all progress reports and report cards. Talk with your child's teacher if you have concerns.
  • Review your child's previous year's test report.
  • Encourage your child to participate in practice-test opportunities.
  • If your child is having difficulty with a subject, call the school and ask if extra support in that subject is offered.
  • Praise your children for working hard and for the things they do well.
  • Set times each day for study and homework.
  • Ask about homework every day, and check to see that it is completed.
  • Give your child a quiet, well-lit, comfortable place to study.
  • Help your child practice exam questions. Review the test together so you will all get familiar with the expectations. Ask your child's teacher for copies of practice questions.

Exam Day

  • Make sure that your child is well rested and eats breakfast.
  • See that your child arrives at school on time and relaxed.
  • Comfort counts. Send a sweater if it's a cool day. Dress in layers for a warm day.
  • Send along all the needed tools- sharpened pencils, pens, rulers, etc.
  • Encourage your child to do the best work possible and to have a positive attitude.
  • Encourage your child to listen/ read carefully to all test-taking directions and to ask questions if any directions are unclear.
  • Remind your child not to get stuck on any one item.
  • Encourage your child to check for accuracy if time permits.
After the Test
  • Once you have received the results and reviewed them.
  • Identify areas of strengths and weaknesses.  For example, were scores higher in math or English? Were your child's math skills stronger in computation or in solving word problems?  Your child's teacher can help you.
  • Praise your child's testing strengths and make a plan to address identified weaknesses.
  • If your child's score is not consistent with his or her grades, contact your child's teacher or counselor.
  • See your child's teacher if you need additional help to understand how your child did on the test. Remember – you are very important to your child's success in school and in life.  Your interest and support lets your child know you believe in him or her and that you value education.   
 Hope these suggestions help you to help your child be successful in school and in life.



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