I am wondering if 1) you keep your children on a schedule during the summer and if so
2) what does that look like
My son only wants to use electronics all day. He will be attending bible camp for three hours each day next week and took a 3 hr class last week as well. His kindergarten teacher gave him a small homework packet and I have workbooks and reading books for him. We also have scheduled playdates, museum trips and a vacation coming up. However, there are days when my husband and I have projects around the house that we want to complete this summer and I could use ideas to keep him busy without electronics.
I haven’t read the whole thread, but at his age (very early elementary), when you have home projects, it’s not going to be feasible to have him do a lot of improving activities independently. So, if it’s just a few days, I’d let him knock himself out on your project days, then make it up on the other days.
The class schedule sounds pretty heavy for a little guy, but it’s probably OK if he’s enjoying it and the whole summer isn’t like that.
We have three kids, 13 (almost 14), 11 and 3. The 3-year-old has been more or less choosing her own schedule (which involves a lot of play doh and making me draw Finding Dory characters), with occasional tablet time. I’m giving myself a pass for her this summer. We’re mostly concerned about keeping the big kids busy. Here’s are our expectations (which may or may not be met on any particular day):
–one hour of physical activity (pool, water park, climbing wall, DDR, trampoline park, rollerskating, whatever)
–one hour of math or science education (could be reading Smithsonian or Discover, book, doing math, watching documentary, visiting museum exhibit, etc.)
–15 minutes music practice for kid who has music lessons
–some household help and baby sister wrangling
That’s for days with no classes or camps. At least in our experience, even a 50 minute swim class keeps the day from feeling empty and unstructured. The kids are doing about two weeks of summer travel to grandmas this summer and they’ve done two weeks of enrichment classes (but just 90 minutes a day). A lot of times, with camps and classes, the kid comes home inspired to do more of the same stuff, so the benefit of the camp or class is much larger than the actual time spent in class. My middle kid will also be doing a two week Red Cross swim course (I’ll need to hustle some private lessons for oldest kid, as she’s done the highest level we have available as a class, this not being a huge town). And we’re hoping that the local music place is able to put together a class for their band camp (the kids play together 2 hours a day for a week) and I’d like my oldest to do a cake decorating class.
I should mention in the past, we’ve done two two-week swim classes for an especially water-loving child.
That may sound like a lot, but there are actually a lot of blank weeks, even if I manage to schedule everything I’d like to, and even the days that the kids have scheduled stuff, it might only be 50-90 minutes a day.
Summer is just a different beast from the rest of the year.