The holiday season is here again.
For the pupils, it is time to play and relax after the stress of the
school year. For them, it’s a period they can enjoy their sleep without
mummies coming to wake them up early. For some parents, too, it’s a
temporary relief from the hassles of school runs.
However, the holiday season comes with
its challenges, especially for working class parents who live in urban
centres. Many parents in this category will now be battling with the
challenge of how to monitor their children while they are away at work.
Some would be thinking of how to gainfully engage them.
For some smart Nigerians, including
school owners, it’s time to make some money by organising summer school
and skills acquisition schemes. These, however, come at a cost which
the parents must bear.
Experts say in spite of this, parents
must ensure that their children are engaged meaningfully. Otherwise,
they could use the period for destructive venture because, as the saying
goes, the devil finds work for the idle hand.
In order to keep them busy during this
period, many parents have fashioned out positive ways to keep their
children out of mischief and trouble while the holiday lasts.
Educationists and parents say pupils must first be taught how to maintain a balance between recreation and academic activities.
An educationist and principal, Global
International College, Lekki, Lagos, Mrs. Bisi Olayiwola, says many
pupils tend to see the period as a time to relax after a hectic academic
exercise, but she warns that such pupils must realise that being on
holiday is not tantamount to completing one’s academic programmes.
She advocates a balancing act between
recreational pursuits and academic exercise. According to her, pupils
can also visit their cousins, aunties, grandparents and even
recreational and historical spots. She says, “This long holiday is normally
seen by many pupils as a time for relaxation. They believe they have
had a stressful time in the school, reading and sitting for their
promotional examinations. Also, it is not out of place for them to
relax and visit some places of interest like the zoo, amusement parks,
the National Theatre and Badagry to see the first storey building in
Nigeria or even visit grandparents, aunties, and cousins.
However, “They must not forget that
there are summer programmes, which focus on either academic or skill
acquisition programmes or both. Pupils should keep busy by attending the
remedial ones to work on those subjects where they are having
challenges, while those who want to acquire skills in bead making,
barbing, hair dressing and fashion design, among others, can also do
so.”
Many parents have already mapped out how to keep their children engaged along this line of thought.
A civil servant, Mrs. Bola Ajao, says her three children are already set for summer camp from next week. But she explains that her second child, a
girl, will be updating her skills in hairdressing, in addition to
attending the summer camp.
She states, “My daughter, who’s the
second child, apart from attending the summer camp, will also update her
skills in hairdressing during this long holiday. She’s already in SS2,
and I have enrolled her for the hair dressing session in a beauty salon.
“Definitely, I need to keep them engaged since I cannot be carrying them to the office every day.”
Also, Mrs. Christie Ajieh says she has a
mixed bag of leisure and study for her two children, who are both in
primary school. She explains that she will be taking them to Port
Harcourt to spend some time with their father, who works in the Garden
City.
Her children, she says, will also attend
a summer camp, not in their school but elsewhere so that they can make
new friends and have new experience.
She adds, “It is good to give them a new
experience and exposure, and that is why I will enroll them for summer
camp in a different school. Besides, I have discovered that my daughter
loves reading; I am going to encourage her by buying her more story
books to engage her.
“Then, for her younger brother, I need
to moderate his love for cartoons. He loves the cartoon series a lot. I
need to regulate this during this period and make him concentrate more
on his studies, though he is still in unior class.”
For Mrs. Ajibola Fadugba, her two boys will have time to relax and to also devote some time to their academic development.
She says she will ensure that she gets them their textbooks for them to get busy for the first few weeks.
“Besides that, they will need time to
relax. That is why we will be travelling to see my elder sister, who
lives in Port Harcourt,” she adds.
Mrs. Idowu Ayodele does value summer
camp too. She has registered her three children – one in secondary
school and two in primary school – in a summer camp which, she says,
runs between August 5 and September 6.
But she states that in-between this academic regime, they will be visiting their cousins who live in different parts of Lagos.
For Chinelo Nwobodo, who will be
resuming at the Holy Child College, Lagos, in September, her
pre-occupation, she says, is to be well prepared to face the new
challenges ahead of her, so as to distinguish herself among her
colleagues.
Nwobodo, who has just left Scholarstic
Hall School, Ikeja, Lagos, says, “I know secondary school is a new
experience, that is why I need to prepare ahead by reading whatever I
can lay my hands on. I need to avoid any form of distraction.”
There are some other ways to get the children engaged during this holiday, experts say.
They suggest that parents can take the
children on some cooking lessons, by teaching them some simple recipes.
They say that children should be allowed “to try out their hands on
foods they love. They may not particularly enjoy the results, but you’re
teaching them about taste, as well as having fun.”
Olayiwola notes that parents can use the
holiday period to introduce the children to nature by taking them to
some natural habitat.
She states that they may be taken to a farm or a conservation garden for them to see plants in their natural form.
“Introduce them to gardening, let them
plant seeds and watch them grow. That is the only way for them to know
that the yam they eat does not grow on trees,” she stresses.
Holiday period is another opportunity to enrol your children in leisure and sports centres, they argue.
They add, “They have loads of
opportunities to learn new sports, from martial arts to badminton,
football to cycling, and swimming to tennis.”
However, most of these activities do not
come cheap. Parents, majority of whom are already burdened by school
fees, will still have to pay for summer schools. Depending on the
location, scope of what they will be taught and status of the school
that is organising the programme, parents might pay between N15,000 and
N150,000.
In some private schools in some remote
parts of Lagos, it could be as low as N8,000, while those in highbrow
areas such as Victoria Island charge as much as N300,000. However, some
schools use the holiday to embark on international excursions, where
participants could pay as high as N1m each.
Within this avalanche of options, it is
only left for individual parents to choose whatever they feel is better
for their children, as they are at home for the next couple of weeks.
Happy Holiday!
Culled from The Punch.
No comments:
Post a Comment