Hawke's Bay Today

Turn your home into a classroom

Home schooling will give parents more time with kids

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Parents have been given a big chance to establish themselves as educators of their children as schools close to help stop the spread of Covid19.

That’s the view of Napier City Councillor Maxine Boag, a former teacher who once specialise­d in the field of resource teaching, learning and behaviour. She also headed a Newspapers in Education project which preceded the modern form of media use in the classroom.

Boag says many homes won’t have internet in their homes, but it is essential that parents about to spend an indefinite period of at least four weeks at home with their children — “no McDonald’s, no

KFC!” — take a positive approach from the start.

It may come down to using some of the basics to make the day interestin­g, she said.

“Maybe the children can help with some baking.”

Speaking as hundreds of thousands of children and young teenagers had their first day off school, at least until the originally scheduled secondterm start date April 28, Boag said figures show part of her electoral ward won’t have internet access. Surveys show 84 per cent of Napier households have internet, but the proportion drops to 78 per cent across the ward, and just 51 per cent in the suburb of Maraenui. Boag believes parents can set up educationa­l and time-useful projects in the home, including rewards such as stars, home-made certificat­es, stickers and even television breaks.

Where the internet and devices are available it might include roping-in others confined to their own homes elsewhere, such as grandparen­ts unable to visit their grandchild­ren during the crisis.

One example is a grandparen­t setting-up a daily quiz for the grandchild­ren, via Facebook.

“It has to be kept positive,” she said.

Educators say the roles parents play at home will have a big impact on their child’s education while maintainin­g routines will be a key challenge.

Among the opportunit­ies is getting children working to a timetable in the home, so that the daytime is much like school but, with most parents also confined, enabling them to spend more time with their children.

Speaking at the daily media conference on Tuesday, Secretary for Education Iona Holsted said the absence of internet capability from homes was acknowledg­ed and ways of alleviatin­g the problem in distance education were being investigat­ed.

Placing devices in homes was a possibilit­y, she said, adding that crises and disasters “reveal inequities in our system — they don’t create them”. “This might be an opportunit­y to give them more resources,” she said.

The Ministry of Education has launched two new websites to support parents who will now be at home with their children, Learning from Home in English language and Ki te Ao Ma¯rama in te reo Ma¯ori.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Teacher-turned city councillor Maxine Boag will be catching up with paperwork in
isolation at home.
Photo / Supplied Teacher-turned city councillor Maxine Boag will be catching up with paperwork in isolation at home.

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