Ways to continue your child’s education over summer
Make summer learning so fun they won’t know they’re learning
Educational toys
Educational games
Another tactic I use to keep the education train rolling is finding games that are educational and fun.Educational TV
Educational living
- On nature walks or hikes, you can study wildlife, plantlife, bugs and rocks. You can talk about how the earth was made, what plants are safe to eat in the wild, how animals in the wild survive and things like that.

A walk along a nature path will give you and your children plenty to talk about and plenty to discover.
You can discuss the beauty of nature or even the harsh reality of nature if the topic arises (especially if it starts to rain while you are walking). You can look at the different ways animals or bugs protect themselves (coloring, speed, camouflage, exoskeletons, etc.). Or you can look at the different kinds of rocks you see and try to determine if they are igneous, metamorphic or sedimentary.
- While cooking, you can teach math skills by measuring ingredients and discussing what different measurements mean. You can discuss the different tools used to measure dry ingredients and wet ingredients. You can go over how many cups are in a gallon or how many teaspoons are in a tablespoon. You can also teach new vocabulary while working with measurements or going over different cooking techniques, such as the difference between julienned and chopped, or whisking versus stirring.
Another great education in cooking is the science involved. While waiting for water to boil, talk about what temperature it boils at or about the three states of matter by looking at how water can become those three states. You can also talk about mixtures and solutions while tossing a salad or dissolving salt or sugar in your batter.
- If you are planting a vegetable garden, you will have plenty of opportunity to discuss the need for food by all living things. You can talk about the plants’ needs as well as your needs. You could also extend the discussion into the need for bees and other pollinators. If you are planting an organic garden, you will want to discuss why it is important and how it helps you and your family live healthier lives. You may want to discuss the vitamins and minerals you will get from the different foods you are planting.
If you are planting a flower garden, talk about design, color choice or wanting to provide a fresh smell to the air or attract butterflies and hummingbirds. If you have a budding landscape artist in your child, have him or her help you choose where to plant and maybe even choose the flowers with you while you are shopping.
- Trips to an art museum, botanic garden, natural history museum or even campsites or vacation resorts are wonderful opportunities to learn. Just be prepared to engage your child in conversation about whatever it is you are seeing or experiencing. The act of talking about it, discussing it and formulating opinions and ideas is an education itself. You have the opportunity to get philosophical or theoretical with some of these discussions. They could be very fun and informative for the whole family.
If you have the opportunity, take a guided tour on some of these trips. The guide will be a huge source of knowledge for both you and your child and will be happy to provide all the information you need and maybe even some folklore to make it all very fun. You may want to encourage your child to ask questions or answer questions the guide has. This will be very helpful for children who have trouble speaking up in class during school, and help him or her break out of that shell.

