8 Great Books to Teach Kids About Responsibility

Reading books about responsibility can help kids develop character in their own lives. Children naturally imitate what they see, and books are the perfect tool for observing responsible behavior and then discussing it.

Kids' books that talk about money can also help children learn to be responsible with their finances. Many kids’ books about responsibility include other important themes of friendship, courage, and sacrifice.

Here’s a list of eight books you can read with kids to teach them about responsibility.

1. Bunny Money

This book is part of the “Max and Ruby” series written by Rosemary Wells. In this installment of the series, the bunny siblings learn about saving and spending. They go shopping for their grandmother’s birthday present and learn just how quickly money can slip through your fingers.

Although the bunnies have enough money for the gifts, they have to call their grandmother to pick them up because there’s nothing left for the bus ride home. This book comes with play money so kids can practice counting and spending as they read.

2. A Bargain for Frances

Part of Russell Hoban’s “Frances” series, this story teaches children how to handle clashes between friendship and finances. In the story, Frances wants a beautiful tea set she sees at the store. After her friend Thelma tricks her and buys the tea set herself, Frances has to decide how to respond.

While adults may not all approve of Frances’ response, this story illustrates the importance of honesty and the value of forgiveness. It’s also a good launching point for adults to talk to kids about the role money should play in friendship.

3. The Bright and Shining Breadboard

Written by Rosalys Hall, this story is set in the early 1700s and tells the tale of a Puritan farmer in search of a wife. His mother advises him to marry someone whose breadboard is clean because a clean breadboard is a sign of good housekeeping.

This story is a lot of fun to read with kids because of the historical differences and the farmer’s funny journey. It’s also a great opportunity to discuss the finances it takes to support a family and how being responsible in one area of life helps you become responsible in other areas as well.

4. Isabel’s Car Wash

This children’s book tells the story of a girl named Isabel who wants to buy a beautiful doll. To earn enough money for her purchase, she asks her friends to lend her money to help her start a car washing business. After working hard, she’s able to pay her friends back and save just enough to meet her goal.

Coauthored by former U.S. Assistant of the Treasury Sheila Bair, this story introduces children to basic financial concepts like saving, investing, and sales tax in simple language they can understand. This story also illustrates how much people can achieve when they work together.

5. The Quiltmaker’s Gift

This beautifully illustrated children’s book tells the story of a woman who gives brightly colored quilts to those in need. When a rich king wants one of her quilts, she tells him he can only have one if he first gives away everything he owns. The king follows her advice and learns the value of giving over receiving.

Written by Jeff Brumbeau and illustrated by Gail Dean Marcken, this story sparks questions about wealth and morality. Adults can use this story to help kids understand what real wealth means and how to use what they’ve been given responsibly.

6. The Ordinary Princess

Authored by M. M. Kaye, this fairytale describes the life of a princess who is unfortunately rather ordinary. After her parents try to hire a dragon to help her find a husband, she runs away and finds a job as a kitchen maid at a faraway palace. Of course, it’s only a matter of time before she is discovered.

The themes in this story include courage, the value of hard work, and the importance of being authentic. Adults who read the story with kids can help them consider the main character’s choices and how they impacted those around her.

7. The Tale of Despereaux

This children’s classic by Kate DiCamillo describes the journey of a small mouse with high ideals. Other important characters include a rat with a bitter heart, a princess who is missing her mother, and a housemaid who just wants to be loved.

Kids will find many lessons on responsibility in this story, including the powerful relationship between choices and their consequences. The way grief and fear can impact actions and interfere with relationships is also a prime theme.

8. The Cloud Spinner

In this children’s book, a wise boy spins clouds into beautiful cloth. After a greedy king demands more and more of these soft garments, the kingdom experiences a drought from the lack of clouds. It’s only after the princess gives back the clothes that balance is restored to the kingdom and rain falls again.

Written by Michael Catchpool, this story describes the dangers of greed and how taking too much for yourself can harm others. Adults can also use this opportunity to discuss the princess’s choice and the king’s relationship with his community.

Lead by Example

Reading books to teach kids responsibility and financial wellness is a great way to help them develop character and start to make good choices on their own. In addition to giving kids role models, books are also a fantastic way to have discussions on these topics.

Start with this list of children’s books, and then expand your library to include many more. Your kids will soak up these stories and the lessons they provide.


Supporting Learning at Home

With so many students facing the possibility of remote instruction every day, many parents are wondering what more they can be doing at home to give their children the support they need to be successful. We've put together some tips and resources, catered specifically to the unique times we all find ourselves in.

1. Digital Literacy

Some skills are universal. They apply to virtually every subject area, and to students' personal lives as well as academics. Living in the technology-heavy 21st century means that students need to become fluent in digital literacy. This means developing a wide range of skills, all of which have to do with technology. From being able to create digital materials, to evaluating the validity of an article, digital literacy refers to one’s ability to use technology to interact and communicate.

2. Mindfulness

One of the most useful universal skills for anyone is mindfulness. Mindfulness is related to metacognition, or a person’s ability to think about what and how they think. Mindfulness, however, is more involved than metacognition. When someone is being mindful, they are fully aware of what they are doing in the present moment and why. They are able to look at situations objectively and with a clear head, and can avoid becoming overly reactive or emotional. It sounds simple, but it’s surprisingly difficult even for many adults. The more students can practice mindfulness, the stronger they’ll be at self-regulating, avoiding stress, and having healthy and positive day-to-day interactions with others. Guided mindfulness meditations are a great way to begin building this skill.

3. Life Skills

Don’t underestimate the importance of simple life skills like cooking, managing money, and having a basic knowledge of first aid. As schools place more emphasis on reading, writing, math, and technological fluency (all of which are vitally important, we don’t deny it!), students are starting to lose much of their foundational knowledge of things like balanced eating and financial literacy. Take it back to basics at home by helping your child build some of these skills he or she may be lacking.

4. STEM Learning

STEM stands for Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math; many schools integrate these four sought-after subjects (some places now offer STEAM classes, which also integrate the Arts). The NASA website has a great resource for at-home STEM exploration, which any "left-brained" thinker will love.

5. Encourage creativity by helping students think outside the box

“Thinking outside the box,” or the ability to problem-solve using creativity and critical thinking, isn’t something students learn easily. There aren’t any one-off lessons that will instantly turn a child into a critical thinker. But there are ways we can help students to build those skills over time. Encourage independent play. Set your children up with projects, even if it just means giving them a pile of clean recyclables and challenging them to build something. Most importantly, be careful how you respond to the way your child approaches a task. We are often quick to correct our children when they “color outside the lines,” both literally and figuratively. Just because children don’t execute a task the way we expect them to doesn’t mean they are doing it “wrong.” Be careful what you correct. Those times when children approach a task differently are often the times they grow the most cognitively!

6. Prioritize play (looks different at different ages and grades)

Everyone knows that play is important for all ages. But not all play is created equal! Educational play looks very different for a preschooler than it does for a high schooler, but both are equally beneficial. Playing video games is not going to be as useful for a kid's brain as playing a game that requires strategy and organization. At the same time, not all video games are bad! It’s important that some of your child’s downtime be spent engaged in educational “play," but be proactive in monitoring and guiding what that play looks like.

7. Don't double dose "dry" academics

One of the best-intentioned but least productive ways to support kids with their learning is to just make them do more of what they already find boring. This is not going to make them learn it any faster or any better, and is more likely to actually frustrate them more! Instead, if there are subjects that your child is either struggling with or dislikes, try to help them find a "way in." If your child hates math but loves sports, take their math work outside and play a game of math soccer. Or change all their word problems to be sports-related. Supporting academics at home should be about piquing interest and fueling curiosity, not piling on the work!

Vocabulary Fundamentals

Vocabulary sometimes gets a bad rap—and with good reason. Historically, students learned vocabulary by memorizing the spelling and definitions of long lists of words. Their teacher would quiz them on it, then they would usually never use those words again. But when a teacher does it right, vocabulary instruction can be an instrumental part of a student’s journey toward reading mastery. So what are the components of good vocabulary instruction and why do they matter?

Orthographic Mapping

We’ve been over orthographic mapping before, but here’s a quick refresher. Orthographic mapping is the process by which students match the sounds in words to the symbols that represent those sounds. Instead of memorizing the spelling of long lists of words, the most efficient way to actually learn new words is through repeated decoding. Experts agree that it takes most neurotypical readers 1-4 times to solidify words into memory in this way. Once the spelling of a word has been solidified, the student can recall that spelling when needed.

Affixes and Root Words

Once students understand that most words consist of parts (like affixes), it becomes much easier for them to learn to segment those words. The most efficient approach to learning the meaning of multisyllabic words is to first learn the meaning of common prefixes and suffixes. Students then use the meaning of these short chunks to deduce the meaning of the larger words in which they appear. This takes far less time and effort than memorizing spellings and meanings of entire multisyllabic words in isolation.

Book Embedded Vocabulary Instruction

When students learn new vocabulary, the best way to teach it is through context. Book embedded vocabulary instruction is a strategy in which teachers strategically select targeted vocabulary words from a text before students read it. Teachers choose words that students are less likely to know and that are important to their understanding of the text. Before reading, students preview the vocabulary words, including a student-friendly definition and some examples. Then they immediately hear or see them in the context of the reading, where they are able to further deepen their understanding of the words based on the context in which they appear.

Multisensory Vocabulary Instruction

There are vocabulary words that inevitably need to be taught explicitly, such as domain-specific words in Math or Science. The most effective ways to teach these words is through a multisensory approach. Merely presenting the word with a definition is not enough. In order to gain a thorough understanding of any new vocabulary words, students need examples, anecdotes, visuals, and plenty of opportunity for practice. This could mean using the word in writing or actually applying the word to a process or practice. 

When students are able to learn and interact with new vocabulary words through frequent and dynamic activities like the ones listed above, they are most likely to make the greatest gains in literacy.

First Session Tips

How you present the start of a new tutoring endeavor to your child can make or break his or her experience. Tutors have tons of tools for starting sessions off on a positive foot. However, a positive tutoring experience starts even before the first session. Here are some of the Do’s and Don’t’s of telling your children they’ll be getting some extra help.

1. Don’t make tutoring a punishment

The decision to begin tutoring for your child may come from any number of places. Perhaps his teacher has expressed concern over an academic area. Perhaps he is having trouble completing assignments, or his grades have recently dipped. Whatever the case is, it’s important that the start of tutoring not be presented as a negative consequence for his actions. When students feel that their tutor is there as a punishment, they are much less likely to get anything out of sessions.

2. Give your child some choice

While your child may not have a say in whether she starts tutoring, there are decisions she can be part of. Maybe she will feel more comfortable with a specific gender of tutor. Maybe she would like a say in which day(s) and time(s) she meets for sessions. Giving your child some power over small decisions like these can go a long way.

3. Empower your child’s learning

Bring your children into the conversation around what they need help with. Ask them where they feel like they are struggling and what is feeling hard for them. This sends the message that the tutor is there exclusively to help them. Since they are the ones who will be receiving the support, ask them what they feel they need the most help with! They might be spot on in their self-evaluation. And if they’re not, there are gentle ways of nudging them in the right direction.

4. Give them time to process

You might be tempted to delay telling your child he’ll start tutoring until the last possible moment, but this is likely to backfire. The more time your child has to process, the more likely he is to come to peace with it. That means he’ll be ready, and maybe even excited, be by the time the first session rolls around. Our goal is for every student to look forward to their time with a tutor by creating a space that is supportive, challenging in the right ways, and surprisingly fun.

5. Make tutoring “cool”

Help remove the tutoring stigma. Just because a child receives tutoring does not mean that he or she is dumb, incapable, or otherwise deficient in some way. Some of the world’s most brilliant minds need a little extra support to reach their full potential—and the tutor-tutee relationship has been vital to intellectual development since at least the days of ancient Greece. See if you can find one or two of your child’s friends or classmates who also receive tutoring. Show them it’s not something to be ashamed of, but a gift that will help them become their very best selves!

Important Lessons Kids Learn Through Reading

Young children soak up information like a sponge, and it can be difficult to keep up with them. One way to help kids learn is by giving them books to read on their own. 

Among many other topics, children’s books teach important lessons about life, relationships and what to do when you make a mistake. They also help kids develop a strong moral compass by considering multiple points of view and presenting questions about right and wrong. 

Here are seven valuable life lessons reading can teach kids: 

1. Be Kind to Others

Research shows that children who read have higher levels of empathy and understanding for others. Stories show kids the inner workings of other people’s minds, which can give them insight into real-life situations where friends may be hurting or angry. 

Stories about kindness also tap into each child’s desire to experience it themselves. The emotions they feel while reading can shape their behavior toward others, so they can better learn to respond to people with thoughtfulness and compassion. 

2. Tell the Truth

Children are not born with an innate desire to tell the truth – in fact, most kids will lie naturally to cover up mistakes or because they’re afraid of consequences for their actions. Books can be a helpful teaching tool for parents and teachers who want to show children the value of honesty. 

Learning to tell the truth is a skill best developed in a loving environment. Once children experience forgiveness and compassion for their mistakes, they’ll find it easier to be open with the adults in their lives. Stories can prepare kids for this progression before they experience it themselves. 

3. Face Your Fears

Children face new things every day that can frighten and overwhelm them. For instance, going to bed in the dark or attending a new school can be scary for children. To help your kids cultivate courage, have them read stories about children confronting their fears. This is one of the most important lessons for kids to learn through reading. 

These stories can focus on silly topics like being scared of the dark or more serious concepts like fear of abandonment or death. Reading stories on courage can show kids how to respond to their emotions. They also demonstrate how facing your fears can often reduce or eliminate them altogether. 

4. Care for the Planet

While some children love learning about the plants and animals around them, others seem naturally wired to destroy things just for fun. Teach your kids empathy and how to care for their environment by reading books that emphasize the value of all living things.

Forming a sustainable mindset early in life will help children develop into responsible, mature adults who take care of their surroundings and think through the consequences of their actions. For instance, early conversations about litter can teach kids the importance of picking up and equip them to make good environmental choices through high school and college.

5. Everyone Has Value

Children are keen observers and often the first ones to point out differences between themselves and others. Books can teach kids how to handle individuality, uniqueness, and comparison between themselves and others. 

An important distinction that stories can show is that equality is not sameness. While everyone deserves love and respect, people all look, think and act differently. Books about kids who are different or lonely can help students learn how to think about others and themselves in a healthy way. 

6. Believe in Yourself

Books can also help kids develop confidence in themselves. In adults, this trait is called self-efficacy. It’s the belief that you have the resources you need to meet your goals and build a full life. Some children know this intuitively, but others have to learn it. 

Many children experience shyness or feel overwhelmed in new situations, and books that affirm their worth and ability can help them face these challenges with security and confidence. Stories that help kids understand perfectionism and what to do if you make a mistake are also great resources for helping kids grow in self-confidence. 

7. You’re Not Alone

Children’s books are a door to the world outside of a child’s personal experience. Through reading, kids learn that while there are many different countries and cultures worldwide, people are mostly the same on the inside. 

Books connect kids to the larger story of humanity and show them they’re not alone in the things they’re going through. Knowledge of this connection can give them the courage they need to hope during difficult circumstances. Books can also prepare them to help others who may be struggling.  

Lessons Kids Can Learn Through Reading

Children’s stories are filled with simple messages that speak to the issues adults face every day. One of the best ways to help kids mature and prepare them for adult life is to let them read – a lot. 

Through stories, kids can develop their understanding of the world around them and figure out how they fit into the larger picture. Books also help them build character and learn to be kinder, courageous and more hopeful individuals.

Smarter Studying

Depending on the specifics of your child’s school schedule, December regularly brings with it the promise of impending holidays and a much needed break, along with the specter of final exams. This last hurdle before the break requires a final sprint of concentration right at the moment in the fall semester when students are increasingly ready to leave the classroom behind for a time. Of course, though, that is why it is so important to help your student clamber over this obstacle successfully and finish the term on a high note. With that in mind, we wanted to be sure to go over Smarten Up’s smart studying tips. 

Target Your Approach

The first step of any strong study plan is figuring out exactly what knowledge will be tested on the exam, and in what format. Cumulative final exams can feel overwhelming, since they might cover 3-4 months worth of material — but attempting to learn every fact and detail from every reading or lecture in that period will often be not just stressful, but counterproductive, depending on the specific requirements of a given teacher. Encourage your student to communicate with their teacher proactively to ask for any guidance on what areas to focus on, and in what way they will be tested: will the test feature multiple choice, short answer, or essay questions? Smart studying is targeted to the content and format that students will actually encounter on test day.

Activate Your Studying

Smart studying is also active, rather than passive. Many students will put in time ‘studying’ by reading through their old notes, or skimming through textbook pages, and then find themselves at a loss on test day when the information they’ve been looking over has vanished from their memory. Instead, students should create opportunities for active engagement with past material every time they sit down to study. If they are looking through textbook pages, they should always use the comprehension questions that are often found at the end of a chapter to test their understanding, or write out a set of questions they can ask themselves about the reading the next day to make sure they’ve remembered the main idea and key details. If they’re expecting to write an essay — or even if they aren’t — writing an outline with bullet-pointed evidence will require students to actively process the information they’re committing to memory and slot it into an argument or narrative that will be easier to retain than a collection of unrelated facts. Rather than memorizing a list of words for a foreign language test, students should write out example sentences, create flashcards, and devise creative connections between similar words. 

Find a Study Buddy

One way to activate the study process is to find a partner. Studies have shown that teaching material is the best way to gain full mastery of it, and if two or more students can divide and conquer on a particularly lengthy study guide, they can make efficient use of studying time to quiz one another and probe for weak spots in their comprehension. A reliable study partner is a very valuable resource, but be sure that he or she does not become an excuse for waiting to start work individually! The best way to feel confident on test day is to study smart by engaging with the material over time and maintaining an active approach to learning.

How Reading Can Help Kids Process Difficult Emotions and Situations

Teaching children to grow into mature, secure adults is incredibly challenging. Unfortunately, many kids face difficult or traumatic situations very early in life. These experiences can make it challenging for them to build trust, develop meaningful relationships and live their lives to the fullest. 

One way to help children understand and move through tough experiences is with reading. Here’s how reading helps kids with mental health. 

1. Teach Observation 

Reading is an excellent way to help children develop their natural observation skills. Books present new ideas in a comfortable way and help them ask questions about the world around them. 

Learning to use their senses and developing intuition can help children process life experiences. Change and new information can be stressful for kids, and reading can equip them to know how to respond when they encounter things that are new or feel overwhelming. 

2. Create Safety

Engaging with stories also creates safety for kids. When they’re immersed in a book, they can take a break from everyday stress and difficult situations. Being transported to another place, person and time can be incredibly restorative and healing, even though it doesn’t change their reality. 

Children are incredibly vulnerable and lack the strength or maturity to control their environments. Teaching them to read can help them feel safe and find meaning outside of their circumstances. Books are a window into possibilities and can offer kids hope even in very bleak situations. 

3. Foster Conversations

Although reading is a powerful processing tool in its own right, it can also be a launching pad for meaningful conversations. You can use books as a teaching tool by reading them with your kids and asking them to engage with the story. 

For instance, you can ask your children what they think about what is happening. How does it make them feel? If they were the main character, would they respond this way? Why or why not? Drawing out your child’s feelings will help you understand their needs and simultaneously teach them to process their inner world. 

4. Explain Emotions

Emotions can easily overwhelm kids, especially if they’re feeling strong ones like fear, anger and grief. Kids are still learning about themselves and their world, and they often blame themselves for situations that make them feel bad. 

Talking to children about how emotions make them feel, what their feelings mean and how to respond equips them with an essential life skill. It can also help them recognize the signs of deep anxiety or depression in their friends and family.

5. Offer Language

Books give words to the language of living – something kids are still actively figuring out. When you read to children about emotions and how to respond to them, you give them the language they need for everyday life. 

Statements like, “I feel ______, but I know ______” can help kids manage their emotions and respond to life situations with maturity. At the same time, books also show children that emotions aren’t bad in themselves. It’s not what you feel but your response to those feelings that matters. 

6. Model Behavior

Children are looking for people to imitate as they grow and encounter new situations. Reading can equip kids with appropriate behavior for many issues they may or may not be actively experiencing. For instance, teaching them how to ask a friend if they’re OK can give them concrete steps to take when they’re worried about someone. 

This method also works in reverse – books are a great opportunity to talk about how someone shouldn’t behave. Discussing a story character’s feelings and choices allows you to teach appropriate behavior without making an individual child who’s acted out feel ashamed. 

7. Develop Empathy

Reading expands children’s imaginations, teaching them to consider things from more than one perspective. Through stories, they can learn about the value of cultures and life experiences that are different from their own. 

Many studies suggest that reading develops empathy, the skill of imagining another person’s emotions and experiences. Expressing this is a meaningful way to show love and is an essential skill for every mature person. 

Books Have Lifelong Value

It’s helpful to understand how reading helps kids emotionally. They learn to process emotions, develop their imaginations and enlarge their perspectives. Using literature to engage with your children is a highly effective way to equip them with the tools they need to navigate their lives. 

Many children experience extremely challenging situations, and reading can equip them to process their emotions and gain a sense of comfort and clarity. Spend time reading with your kids, and they’ll continue to benefit from books for the rest of their lives.

Strategies for Improving Reading Fluency

Reading fluency refers to a student's ability to read in a way that sounds natural. It includes students’ reading rate, the expression with which they read, and the accuracy of what they are reading. Fluency is separate from the skills of decoding and comprehension. Students can have strong decoding and comprehension skills and weak fluency or vice versa. Exposure to these three areas certainly helps strengthen each in turn. However, practicing reading with a focus on decoding and comprehension exclusively does not guarantee improved fluency.

Fluency is an important part of becoming a competent reader. When a student struggles with fluency, it is likely that other areas of her reading may suffer. For students who struggle with accuracy, the meaning that they make of their reading becomes skewed. And when students read slowly, often due to a lack of sight word knowledge or labored decoding, they retain less. Finally, when they read without expression, it can have a negative impact on their reading comprehension. 

Here are some ways you can help students strengthen their reading fluency:

Model Fluent Reading

When modeling what fluent reading sounds like, it's important to include a wide variety of text types. This way, you provide students with exposure to lots of different ways to read expressively. The expression we use when reading dramatic fiction is very different from that which we use when reading a news story. The younger the students, the more often they should be hearing what good, fluent reading sounds like.

Echo Reading

A great way to get kids to practice reading fluently is to let them copy exactly how you do it. This is called Echo Reading. When students are able to hear you model fluent reading and then immediately practice it themselves, they are more likely to use proper expression, rate, and accuracy. Echo reading can be effective in both one-on-one settings as well as in groups.

Reader’s Theater

One of the first ways young children learn how their reading should sound is through stories. This is why using reader's theater to allow students to practice their reading is an excellent method for improving fluency. Whereas regular stories are told in a narrative format, Reader's Theater allows students to take on a role in the story as they are reading it. This reading role-play encourages them to speak as their character would speak, which makes reading with expression feel more natural.

Build sight word knowledge

Sometimes a student's struggle with fluency is related to weak sight word knowledge. When this is the case, it is important to strengthen the students' ability to recognize sight words, as well as increase the number of sight words. While it used to be thought that sight words needed to be “memorized,” the best way for students to really internalize sight words is through the process of orthographic mapping.

Use visuals in text for breaks, pauses, inflections, etc.

Most of us know that when we come to a period in a text, we need to pause in order to communicate to ourselves or to our listener that we’ve reached the end of a complete thought. Some students have a much harder time remembering what that period means, or even noticing it at all. While real-world texts won't include any extra visuals beyond punctuation marks and text styles, some students benefit from a little extra coding in their text to help remind them what their reading should sound like. This can include a color-coded set of additional symbols that tell the student when to pause (when there is a period), when to inflect their voice up (when there is a question mark), when to emphasize a word (italics or bold), etc.

Identify natural phrases in text

Another strategy that can help students learn how to group words more naturally as they are reading is to specifically look for natural phrasing in text and circle those phrases. This takes modeling for students to do correctly, but once they are familiar with the process it can go a long way in eventually helping them apply the skill of identifying phrases to their reading naturally.

The Value of Brain Breaks

“Brain breaks” are pretty self-explanatory. They are breaks that our brains need in order to be most productive. Anytime we are learning or engaging in any cognitive task that requires brain power, our brains need opportunities to rest. These breaks are especially important for children and adolescents whose brains are not only learning, but also growing and developing. While the duration and frequency of breaks will depend on the task as well as the individual, there are some general rules of thumb to follow. The following tips can be applied to the classroom, the tutoring session, homework time, and any other learning experience.

1. Be mindful of timing

Breaks should be scheduled at approximately consistent intervals during periods of cognitive workload. However, it is important to schedule breaks so that the flow of an activity is not disrupted and students’ momentum stays intact. In the classroom, this can be in between lessons/periods/activities. At home, find your child’s individual stamina threshold and have them set a timer to make sure they take a break once they’ve hit their max. While older children and adults will have increased work stamina, it’s still important that their brains get rest, too.

2. Incorporate movement

Brains love blood flow. Anything that involves light to moderate movement is great for helping brains recharge for the next period of learning. For students who are restless or need to get wiggles out, have them try an upbeat dance video or some jumping jacks. For students who need centering, a few minutes of yoga will be more helpful.

3. Avoid screens

Especially if work is on the screen, the best brain breaks are off screen. Screen fatigue is very real, and while extra screen time probably won’t kill your kid’s brain cells, it will fatigue their eyes after long enough. If their learning is off-screen, and a few minutes of mindless scrolling will help them get ready for the next segment of learning, that’s okay. But for screen-based activities, they should be getting outdoors, moving their bodies somehow, or otherwise engaging in unplugged restorative activities periodically.

4. Use music and/or meditation

Music is an incredibly effective energizer. It has the cognitive power to refresh our brain cells and get our focus back on track. Meditation is also a great option, and promotes stress reduction and heart rate regulation, both of which improve our mental state and prepare us to tackle more work.

5. Teach students how to self-monitor

The goal should be for students to eventually know and be able to apply all these guidelines to their own learning. When coming up with a plan for your child’s learning breaks, tell them exactly why they should be taking breaks and the do’s and don’ts of their breaks, using the tips above. Eventually, they will gain the self-awareness to determine when they need a break on their own, and the initiative to get back to work when it’s time.

Learning Math Through Literacy

Many people think of math and reading as separate subjects. While the skills involved in each are quite different, there are so many ways and reasons to connect them. Aside from having students read and solve word problems, there are lots of other creative ways to integrate math and literacy. Here are some of our favorite integration strategies.

Math Stories

These math learning activities take word problems to the next level. As the name suggests, math stories combine two essential components of both math and literature: computation and story-line. Through the components of a story, students keep track of totals, calculate differences, compare quantities, and so on. This is a great way to have students practice both reading comprehension and math skills all in one shot.

Writing About Math

Some students become perplexed when we ask them to write about math. They think math is supposed to use numbers, not words. But demonstrating their understanding and their processing of math topics with words in addition to numbers not only allows them to practice writing, but it also helps them develop new ways to talk about and engage with math concepts.

Read-Alouds

Teachers incorporate read-alouds into all kinds of subject areas other than the reading block, so why not math? There are plenty of books out there that contain explanations and examples of math concepts, as well as actual opportunities for students to practice those skills. With careful selection of the right read-aloud, students have the opportunity to work together on solving problems in new ways with teacher guidance.

Math Journals

Journaling isn’t just for writing and social studies. Math journals are another great way to have students reflect on their mathematical thinking and reason about math using words. Math journaling gives students the opportunity to demonstrate their thinking in a way that may feel more comfortable to them. It also addresses different learning styles. Some students do much better expressing themselves through a paragraph than through a string of number sentences.

Teach Math Vocabulary

Teaching math vocabulary often involves introducing a word and showing enough examples of it for students to understand its meaning. However, it often doesn’t go further than that. Just as we explicitly teach vocabulary in other content areas, we should also make space for explicit instruction in math vocabulary as well. In addition to demonstrating understanding of these words through actual problem-solving, students can also use these words in other ways. Create a math word wall, or have students create their own with definitions, examples, sentences, etc. Or have students use these words in their own math problems. The more familiar they become with math vocabulary, the more articulately they’ll be able to communicate about math concepts.