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8/3/2019 Aurora Kumon Newsletter 2011
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/aurora-kumon-newsletter-2011 1/1
CONNECTIONSLet your child amaze you
Aurora Kumon e-News
The Aurora Naperville Kumon Center is in full award swing as we
prepare for another highly anticipated ceremony. All students have
been working very hard throughout the year, and the time has come
to recognize the students on their hard work. In addition to the
trophies and medals, the students most appreciated praise comes
from you, the parents.
Since this event is not only to congratulate the students on their
hard work, but also to encourage progress for the coming year, we
strongly encourage all students and parents or guardians to attend.
Please keep in mind you must RSVP in order for your child to be
recognized at the event.
Registration Deadline is Oct 8th. No Exceptions!
Ceremony Date: Sunday Oct 30, 2011
Location: Neuqua Valley High School,
2360 95th Street, Naperville, IL 60564
Timings: Aurora Center Students: 3:15 PM
Naperville Center Students: 5:15 PM.
Annual 2011 Awards Ceremony
Vol 11 Issue 1 Oct 1, 2011
Pursue Potential
Be consistent
Your child benefits from routine in the same way you do and consistency will help your child achieve both the big leaps
and the small steps.
Inspire
Encourage your child to explore new interests independently. Show interest and learn from your child’s new
enthusiasm.
Be an advocate
Support your child for his or her unique qualities and encourage your child to pursue his or her dreams without reserve.
With a little love and a lot of determination, you will find that your child can and will accomplish amazing things.
Find us on Facebook for more tips and suggestions: www.facebook.com/kumon
To remove your name from our mailing list, please send us an email with “unsubscribe” in the subject line.
Questions or comments? E-mail us at [email protected] or call 630-926-8538
Annual 2011 Awards Ceremony
You have questions, we have answers
To Read or Not to Read?
Monthly Home Goal
In this Issue
Student award ceremony is on Oct
30th, 2011.
Center time is dedicated for students
only. If you have questions about
your child, please call to setup a
separate time to address questions
and concerns.
Answer Books are available for you to
borrow in order to assist you in
checking your child’s work.
We want to make your child an
independent learner, solving his or
her own questions through guided
questions, not direct answers.
Please don’t help your child by giving
away direct answers!!
Reminders
Q. Why is my student repeating the same material?
A. Repetition is precisely what reinforces and ensures that children fully understand and remember the material they’ve covered.
It’s a basic skill that will help them throughout their entire academic careers.
Q. My child seems to be ignoring the instructions on multiple assignments and thus answering incorrectly. How do
I correct this behavior?
A. If you notice your student ignoring the directions, highlight the instructions and hand it back. This is calls out the
problem without directly stating what the instructions are asking the student to do: encouraging independent learning.
You Have Questions, We Have Answers
To Read or Not To Read: A Question of National Consequences, is a new and comprehensive
analysis of reading patterns in the Unites States. Gathering statistics from more than 40
studies on the reading habits and skills of children, teenagers, and adults, the compendium
reveals recent declines in voluntary reading and test scores
alike, exposing trends that have severe consequences for American society.
Americans are reading less — teens and young adults read less often and for shorter amounts of time compared with
other age groups and with Americans of previous years.
Less than one-third of 13-year-olds are daily readers, a 14 percent decline from 20 years earlier. Among 17-year-
olds, the percentage of non-readers doubled over a 20-year period, from nine percent in 1894 to 19 percent in
2004.
On average, Americans ages 15 to 24 spend almost two hours a day watching TV, and only seven minutes of their
daily leisure time on reading.
Americans are not reading as well — reading scores continue to worsen, especially among teenagers and young males.
By contrast, the average reading score of 9-year-olds had improved.
Reading scores for 12th grade readers fell significantly from 1992 to 2005, with the sharpest declines among lover-
level readers.
2005 reading scores for male 12th-graders are 13 points lower than for female 12th-graders, and that gender gap
has widened since 1992.
Reading scores for American adults of almost all education levels have deteriorated, notably among the best-
educated groups. From 1992 to 2003, the percentage of adults with graduate school experience who were rated
proficient in prose reading dropped by 10 points, a 20 percent rate of decline.
The declines in reading have civic, social, and economic implications — Advanced readers accrue personal,
professional, and social advantages. Deficient readers run higher risks of failure in all three areas
Nearly two-thirds of employers ranked reading comprehension “very important” for high school graduates. Yet 38
percent consider most high school graduates deficient in this basic skill.
American 15-year-olds ranked fifteenth in average reading scores for 31 industrialized nations, behind Poland,
Korea, and Canada, amount others.
Literary readers are more likely than non-readers to engage in positive civic and individual activities —such as
volunteering, attending sports or cultural events, and exercising.
For full story, visit: http://1.usa.gov/8GC8Bp
To Read or Not To Read?
Contact Us: 630-926-8538
This month, my child, , and I, , will work to attain the
below at-home goal:
Monthly Home Goal
“There is noachievement
without
goals.”
Robert J. McKaine