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How to Support a Science Fair Project, Without Taking Over (page 3)

By Jane Healey

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Parents want to cheer their children on, and they often do so by emphasizing the positive and downplaying the negative. “Great try,” for a puck wide of the net. “Good effort,” for the dive that became a belly flop. As they age, children recognize the dissonance between a parent’s words and their performance, creating distrust of parents’ comments. Parents need to modulate the balance between encouragement and constructive observation, shifting toward the former as their children advance in school. For example, an eight year old’s errant basketball shot might warrant a, “Good try,” while a sixteen year old who shoots instead of passes to an open teammate might earn a, “I know you have great confidence in your abilities, but the center was open and he had a higher percentage opportunity.” Similarly in school work, a nine year old who forgets about a vocabulary quiz might arrange for mom to write the dates on a big calendar while a seventeen year old who commits the same forgetfulness would need to be reminded that he will be on his own at college and passing his courses requires close attention to details like scheduling.

Throughout these stages, parents need to step back and remember that the child’s frustrations are fertile ground for leaps in learning. Patience, sympathy and understanding nurture a child’s independent growth. It’s extremely difficult for many parents to accept, but at times, helping children the most means doing very little at all.

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