Your involvement in your child's education will help
your child achieve more success and have a positive outlook on school.
Not exact matches
More broadly, he advised that to help them
achieve success, parents should speak to their
children in ways that help them
achieve a growth mindset.
Commentary on an article in the New York Times (registration required for the NY Times article) which suggests that young women today are putting
more into their careers because of a desire to
achieve success before having
children.
Significant
success was also
achieved in universal education with
more than 97 % of
children of school going age being enrolled in school, with a gender parity of 1:1.
«Parents, teachers and employers know that
children who are talented, motivated, goal - driven and collegial are
more likely to weather the storms of life, perform well in the labour market and consequently
achieve lifetime
success,» it says.
In addition to preventing illness, young
children who are
more physically active are
more likely to
achieve higher academic
success, less likely to develop mental health problems, and less likely to start smoking than
children who are
more sedentary.
Following a holistic approach, Conexión Américas has developed nationally - recognized programs that support
more than 6,000 Latino families in
achieving their American dream annually: learning English, purchasing homes, supporting their
children's academic
success and path to college, and becoming an integral part of Nashville's social, cultural, and economic vitality.
As I have noted, stronger standards alone aren't the only reason why student achievement has improved within this period; at the same time, the higher expectations for student
success fostered by the standards (along with the accountability measures put in place by the No
Child Left Behind Act, the expansion of school choice, reform efforts by districts such as New York City, and efforts by organizations such as the College Board and the National Science and Math Initiative to get
more poor and minority students to take Advanced Placement and other college prep courses), has helped
more students
achieve success.
The privately run schools that receive public funds will give parents one
more option to help their
children achieve academic
success.
Inherent in BVP's mission is the belief that all
children can
achieve at high academic levels, and those demographics do not, and
more importantly should not, determine their level of
success.
The promise of a great public education for all
children is under pressure not only from out - of - touch legislators, but from economic and societal factors outside school that make it much
more difficult to
achieve success within the classroom.
An all - of - the - above strategy focused on student
success, and less on the vehicle that delivers upon that
success, will keep our
children moving forward and
achieving more.»
In my imagination, all parents have learned the active role they play in the academic
success of their
children; understanding that the
more they get involved, the greater the chances are for their sons and daughters to
achieve everything they put their mind to do.
To politicians like de Blasio, I — an educator of poor and minority
children — am public enemy number one, but to thousands of families across New York,
Success Academy schools are proof of what
children can
achieve and they have raised their voices to demand educational opportunity for
more students.
A
child in good mental health is
more likely to form and maintain positive relationships, engage in their schooling and
achieve academic
success as well as greater
success later in life.
They are committed to raising
children who are
more capable of compassion, empathy for others and the environment, having lifelong healthy relationships, self confidence, greater resilience,
achieving success in school, and experiencing a sense of contentment.
Well said Dr. McPadden... I could not have said it better... if
children are to grow up and
achieve their potential, they need to believe in themselves... grades alone are not a reflection of our potential... social emotional learning is as important if not
more important than IQ alone as a barometer of
success as an adult.