A
summer trip is a great time to make academic skills come to life.
School-age children often
wonder how the things they are learning at school relate to their
everyday life. Parents wonder how they are going to keep their children
from forgetting everything they learned at school during the summer
break.
With a little creativity
and common sense, fun and practical activities can be made-up that
will keep up children's skills and make the learning relevant.
Here are some suggestions
of activities you can "direct" when preparing for and taking a trip
with your family this summer.
Geography
- Locate your home and
destination on a map. Find out such things as: What route(s) will
you be taking? What direction will you be going? What states,
cities, or counties will you be going through?
- Get a book or pamphlet
on the cities or states you will be going to. Find something interesting
that you would like to see or share with the family.
Math
- Keep track of your
mileage. Write down the starting and ending mileage each day.
Use your subtraction skills to find out how many miles you traveled
that day. Did you travel more miles today than yesterday? How
many more or how many fewer? Add to find out how many miles you
have traveled all together. Find out how many miles you still
have to go. What is the average number of miles traveled in a
day?
- Make a bar graph to
show the number of miles traveled per day.
If you bring money to spend on your trip, keep a record of how
much you started with, how much you spent, and how much you have
left. A blank check register borrowed from Mom or Dad would be
a great place to record this.
Language Arts /
Comprehension
- Keep a daily journal.
Write down things that you thought were fun different, or interesting.
At the end of the week, choose one entry to read to your family.
- Tell or write two
facts and two opinions about something you saw.
- Compare a city you
have traveled through to your home city. How are they the same?
How are they different?
- Draw some of the road
signs you have seen. Write or tell what you think they mean. Get
a book that is local to where you are traveling. Listen to or
read the story as a family Make pictures in your mind. Discuss
the story. (On our vacation through Yellowstone last summer, we
read a story about an ancient Indian boy living in the Yellowstone
area. Traveling through the area helped the story come alive and
was a great way to pass the miles).
- Think about something
you saw on your trip. Picture it in your mind. Describe it without
telling what it is. Have other family members guess what you were
thinking of.
- Read menus! Collect
menus from restaurants that will allow you to keep one. As you
read different menus, you will get used to how some of the common
words look. Make up your own menu to play with.
- With the help of Mom
or Dad, create an itinerary for each day. Read the day's plans
to the family.
History
- Visit historical places
along the way or in the city where you are staying. Notice the
differences in what people work, what they did, and how they lived.
What were some of the important things that happened? When did
they happen? How many years ago was that?
- Pick up five to eight
picture postcards that show historical events. Put the postcards
in order of when they happened and tell about them.
- Make a time line to
show the events you learned about. Write the dates and key words.
Draw pictures or use postcards to illustrate your timeline.
- Read a biography about
a famous person from the area. (Visitor centers often have children's
biographies as well as books for more mature readers.)
Traveling, where on short
or long trips, whether by plane, train, or car, offers many opportunities
for practical learning. Be creative! Have fun with it! It is surprising
how much the whole family can learn!
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