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How to Educate Your Child at Home During the COVID-19 Pandemic – a Few Helpful Tips

Saba Safdar • Mar 24, 2020

How to Educate Your Child at Home During the COVID-19 Pandemic – a Few Helpful Tips 

As we enter the strange and unchartered territories of COVID-19 and the impact it is having on our lives, we suddenly find ourselves our children’s educators, which for many can feel daunting. What should we be teaching our children, how and at what times of the day? Many parents will be wondering if they should try and stick to the routines of school, what subjects should be taught when and how often and experiencing genuine concern as to if they are going to get this right and will their children miss out on too much education?

The truth is that everyone is finding their way in the dark through the unknown world of the Coronavirus with some feeling more prepared than others. While we watch our friends set out the perfect schedules while seeming to have everything perfectly under control, we may be feeling the pressure to do the same. Let’s take a look at a few tips that will help you to keep on educating your children until such a time that COVID-19 stops dictating our lives and the children can return to school. 

Break it Down 
Don’t worry about creating a whole 3-month schedule of learning. None of us know how long the Coronavirus will affect our lives. In the first instance, just tackle the first week. Then the second and then it will be the Easter holidays at which point, you don’t have to provide any education if you choose, although it may help to keep a routine when the children cannot go anywhere.

Break it down into days - mornings and afternoons, hour by hour until you have some sort of schedule that you feel comfortable with. Involve your child in this planning so that they feel they have some sort of ownership over things and get them excited about their new home schooling. 

Plan & Prioritise – Core Subjects
For those parents who are concerned about their children falling behind at school while the world comes to a halt thanks to the Coronavirus, think about the core subjects and prioritise them. English and Maths are priority. In a large number of cases there will be work and guidelines set by your school. Some primary children will have books to follow or they will have been advised in the direction of certain resources. 

Take some time to do some discovery with your children before you start. What are they studying in maths, English, science and history or other subjects at school. What topics, figures from history or scientific matter have they been learning about. These things can help you to find online resource and test their knowledge, in the process you will be learning new things together.   

Set Up a Routine Similar to School  
Get out of the pyjamas, get dressed, brush teeth, have breakfast and then be ready to go at 9am. If you think it will help, let them wear their school uniform. Consider the following: 

• Schedule the lessons, with input from your child
• Talk about what they do at school currently and find online resources to support this 
• Make the day interesting by varying things. Don’t have them sat at a desk from 9am until 3pm
• Have a dedicated study area, free from distractions and switch the phones and iPads off during this time
• Get them outside – learn about nature in your very own garden or local nature trails 
• Have regular breaks 
• Test their knowledge regularly by asking them to teach you 

Take Advantage of Free Resources 
Celebrities like Joe Wicks are coming together to offer their support during this COVID-19 crisis. He is currently offering live 9am PE lessons every day. Set them up for the day by making this part of their daily routine or tune in twice a week to take part. This way, you know that your child is getting enough exercise even when they can’t get out. 

You can even make it a group activity where the whole family gets involved. If they can get their friends involved too, they can all discuss it later when they get free time to chat online. These things are new to you and your children and will help to break up the days ahead.  

Supply Children with Healthy Snacks 
Fruit, water and healthy snacks will fuel their brains and help them to concentrate. Focus on feeding them a healthy diet with home cooked foods at meal times. Make cooking part of their studies – be the Home Economics teacher. 

Try and vary the snack each day and maybe even try some new fruits and healthy snacks. Use the opportunity as more learning. Find the fruits that they haven’t tried before and use these. Give them a fruit that they may not have seen and ask them to find out what it is. 

Consider Your Approach
You are not trying to get them to tidy their room, you are their teacher. You need to think about how you approach this and be everything a good teacher should be. Don’t criticise them, encourage them, don’t get frustrated and try and show them how to do it, let them find their own way. 

Be supportive and switch off from being mum or dad to become their educator, their mentor and someone they can feel comfortable with in a learning environment. Celebrate their success, praise them and help them when they make a mistake to realise the mistake for themselves. 

Champion Reading
Reading is a great way to escape from the worry and anxiety that they may be feeling in this strange and uncertain time. Amazon are still delivering and no doubt there are a plentiful supply of books that they can get stuck into. Encourage them to read. 

If they are reading quietly for an hour in a corner of the house or in the garden then that is fine. The more reading they do, the more knowledge they will gain. Set up a reading corner with a light and comfortable bean bags or pillows for those days when the weather isn’t so nice but try and encourage them to read on a blanket in the garden or in a garden chair. 

Use the Tools You Have
You aren’t qualified as a teacher and you aren’t going to get inspected by Ofsted so be creative. If you want them to learn history, find documentaries on TV or films that closely follow fact. Horrible Histories is a fun way to learn about historical events and there are nature programmes such as Blue Planet to help them learn and escape. 

Perhaps you are an expert in a certain field as part of an interest or your profession. Teach them what you know. Help them to learn new skills that you are confident in. Learning is learning – the more knowledge they have, the better. 

Fuel their Imagination 
Get them to create stories, to document the events going on in the world, to become their own news reporters, have fun with them, inspire them. Get them outdoors by allocating a part of the garden where they can grow their own fruit and veg. Where permitted, take them on dog walks and explore hidden trails free from other people where they can take pictures of wild plants and flowers and then Google them when they get home. Use this time to be creative and to inspire your children to learn more about the world around them but above all, don’t worry – you’ve got this! 
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