Stephan Mitchell Stephan Mitchell

The Summer Slide: What Parents Can Do to Help Children Stay on Track

Summer break is important for rest and growth, but research shows that some children can lose academic skills during extended time away from school. Learn practical, evidence-based ways to keep children engaged in learning while still enjoying their summer.

As the school year comes to an end, many children look forward to a well-earned break from homework, tests, and daily academic demands. Summer provides valuable opportunities for rest, family time, travel, outdoor activities, and experiences that support social and emotional development. However, research has consistently shown that extended periods away from academic engagement can result in a decline in certain skills, particularly in reading and mathematics. This phenomenon is commonly referred to as the “summer slide.”

The summer slide does not affect every child equally. Research suggests that students who are already struggling academically may experience greater skill loss during the summer months, while students who regularly engage in reading, learning activities, and enriching experiences often maintain or even improve their skills. The encouraging news is that preventing significant regression does not require turning summer into school.

One of the most effective strategies supported by research is simply encouraging regular reading. Children who read consistently throughout the summer tend to maintain stronger literacy skills than those who do not. Importantly, the reading material does not need to look like traditional schoolwork. Novels, graphic novels, magazines, biographies, informational texts, and books related to a child’s interests can all contribute to literacy development. Choice often increases engagement, which increases the likelihood that children will continue reading independently.

Mathematics can also be reinforced through everyday experiences. Cooking, shopping, budgeting, measuring, travel planning, and even certain board games naturally incorporate mathematical thinking. These activities help children apply skills in meaningful contexts while reducing the pressure often associated with formal academic practice.

Research also highlights the importance of maintaining opportunities for children to think, problem-solve, and engage in meaningful conversations. Visits to museums, libraries, parks, historical sites, community events, and cultural activities expose children to new ideas and vocabulary while encouraging curiosity and critical thinking. These experiences support learning in ways that may not immediately resemble traditional academics but contribute significantly to development.

At the same time, summer can provide valuable information about a child’s learning profile. Without the structure and support of the classroom, some children continue to read, write, and learn with relative ease. Others may demonstrate persistent struggles that become more noticeable when parents have an opportunity to observe them more closely. Difficulty reading independently, avoiding academic tasks, becoming unusually frustrated during learning activities, or showing significant challenges with attention, organization, memory, or executive functioning may warrant a closer look.

While occasional frustration is a normal part of learning, consistent patterns that interfere with a child’s ability to engage successfully may indicate that additional support is needed. In these situations, summer can be an ideal time to gather information and better understand how a child learns.

A comprehensive psychoeducational evaluation can help identify underlying factors that may be contributing to academic, behavioral, emotional, or attentional difficulties. Rather than focusing solely on what a child is struggling with, a quality evaluation helps uncover why the struggle is occurring by examining cognitive processing, academic skills, attention, executive functioning, and other factors that influence learning. This information can help families make informed decisions and enter the new school year with greater clarity and confidence.

Ultimately, the goal of summer is not to replicate the school year. It is to create opportunities for children to rest, grow, explore, and continue learning in meaningful ways. Small, consistent experiences often have a greater impact than intensive academic programs that are difficult to sustain.

When children remain engaged, curious, and connected to learning throughout the summer, they are often better prepared to return to school ready to build upon the progress they made during the previous year.

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