We can’t all have children who are outright geniuses or have a passion to learn. Maybe its not so much that kids don’t want to learn, but more so that their surroundings don't encourage them to put effort into learning. These methods should give parents an idea of where to start. The first method is for parents to show a standard of acceptance before expectations. What this means is children should not feel forced to study nor should parents pressure them to the point it becomes more of a burden. Show children its okay to not get the concepts in one try and if they make a mistake, encourage them to keep trying. Paying attention to a child’s interest can improve their learning because for some kids, nothing is interesting unless a parent can find a way to apply dinosaurs in a math question for instance. Kids will one way or another test an adult patience’s for every time they ask “why?”. Rather than have a back and forth with a child, encourage a child’s curiosity and give them a window of opportunity to delve into the topic in their own way. School is essential for a child's education, but it shouldn’t be an all-or-nothing approach. Instead, it could simply be that the child doesn’t feel completely comfortable at school, so it’s worth teaching them at home, park, library, etc. Learning doesn’t have to follow traditions through and through. It makes a difference to provide visuals or demonstrations to keep a child engaged in the work. There are other methods such as working together, reducing distractions, or asking help from another adult. Regardless of which approach a parent takes, a child’s well being is the utmost priority.
The questions is: How can teachers engage the children, make them feel interesting in the contents of the subjects? Each student is unique and although it is difficult for the teachers to FEED all of them I think there is a lack of effort in the educational system to improve. They want all of them to be the same and this is literally impossible.