Parenting Tips: How to Create Beneficial Study Room for Children

Lizzie Elzingre
Parents must not take for granted the importance of a study room for children. Child Experts agree that a study area must fit the child's age, personality, requirement, and the family situation. No matter what you do, do not simply toss a table in any room, or expect your child to work on homework around the television, in the floor, or in the kitchen table.

The study room you create for your child is an outward representation of how you regard time for studying. The message is clear, "This is how we view study time." Nevertheless, here are tips for parents on how to create beneficial study area for children.

The study room or area must have very good ventilation, with sufficient lighting-white light is best. Whether light is bright or dim depends on the level of alertness needed. When strong focus is required while doing math problems, then more light is preferable. Low light may be helpful when the child is reflecting on how to structure an essay, but be careful not to make it too dim that he falls asleep.

Temperature should be neither too warm nor too cold, but a temperature conducive to effective studying. Provide your child with a good table and a chair at the proper height to avoid strain injury. It is also useful to build shelves and drawers for books and paraphernalia.

Minimize distraction during study time. It is best not to have a television, a stereo, or a phone line in the study room. Communicating with your child regarding study time and break is important so that you know when to approach the child. Some students swear that they study better and score higher in spatial and abstract reasoning if they listen to "Sonata in D Major" for ten minutes before study time.

Classical music helps that is according to The Center of Neurobiology and Memory at the University of California. The benefits include relaxation and stress reduction, the fostering of creativity through brain wave activation, the stimulation of imagination and thinking, and reduction in disciplinary problems.

Ideally, parents must be active participants in their child's education since they are task to foster learning skills, and they play integral role between the teacher and tutor. To parents who think they cannot spend time with their children because of the load of responsibilities, it is not an excuse to shirk being the loving guide for your child.

Published by Lizzie Elzingre

Challenges are the foundation of my life experiences, and they are something I do with confidence.  View profile

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