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Homework Help for Parents

Help for Homework During School Closures

We here at Thurles.Info have had a very positive response to our regular education posts, aimed at supporting learning at home during school closures.

For those of our readers who may have missed one or more of our blogs; for your convenience we have drawn together all of our links. We hope that these resources and ideas in some small way helped to support parents faced with the challenge of teaching and learning at home.

Hereunder, please find a recap of our previous homework help posts and their associated links.


Literacy and Other Subjects

Great Website to support Literacy and Learning at Home

More great website to support Literacy and Learning at Home

Even more great website to support Literacy and Learning at Home

Homework Help For Mums & Dads


Mathematics and Coding

Get Kids Computer Coding With FREE Online Course

Parents – Five Top Websites For Free Maths Worksheets


Gaeilge

Top Resources for Irish Language Learning


Offline Activities

Fun & Games Requiring No IT Streaming or IT Applications


Educational Resources on RTÉ, YouTube and Netflix

Top Five YouTube Channels To Keep Families Laughing & Learning

Top 5 Educational Shows on Netflix For Kids

Help For Learning At Home With RTÉ’s Home School Hub


Science

Win €1000 For Your School Or Youth Group

Battle Boredom With Stem Projects – Kids Will Love Them


Online Safety and Wellbeing

Resources For Keeping Young People Well During Covid-19

Parents, Make Kids Media Wise & Support SPHE Learning at Home

Resources To Help Children & Young People Stay Safe Online


Music

Top Three Websites Supporting Music Appreciation & Learning At Home


History

Thurles Can Travel Back In Time Assisted By Dúchas.ie


Free Online Courses

Free Online Courses From FutureLearn


How to Access Free Primary and Secondary School Books Online

Free Access To Schoolbooks – Primary & Secondary

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Parents – Five Top Websites For Free Maths Worksheets

Find a worksheet to help your children with maths learning at home.

Whether it is to test maths skills, reinforce or revise them, maths worksheets are an essential part of the teaching and learning toolkit.

For parents and teachers supporting learning at home, here are five websites that offer free access to good quality maths worksheets in PDF format.

PDF stands for Portable Document Format. PDFs retain their intended format and are easy to email and open on absolutely any device.
Another bonus of the PDF file is that you can easily display PDFs on screens and have pupils record their answers on paper. No need for costly printing!

  • Snappymaths.com provides access to worksheets categorised by maths topic and presented in an order that supports step by step learning. An excellent resource.
  • Mathsdrill.com is home to thousands upon thousands of worksheets on almost every maths topic. You are sure to find something here.
  • Worksheetgenius.com is, as the name implies, a genius resource. It enables the user to create and customize their maths worksheets. Not only that, but Worksheetgenius.com also enables users to create and customize worksheets for spelling, phonics, bingo and a whole host of other teaching and learning favourites.
  • Maths-aids.com provides free access to high quality maths worksheets organised according to topic. Like other websites on our list, it enables users to customize and create worksheets for their students’ particular needs.
  • Maths4childrenplus.com not only provides free access to maths worksheets for primary and secondary pupils, it also provides access to games, flashcards, colouring pages and a whole host of other useful resources. Well worth checking out.
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Parents, Make Kids Media Wise & Support SPHE Learning at Home

Why not support SPHE learning at home with the help of MediaWise?

SPHE stands for Social, Personal and Health Education and has been a compulsory subject in Irish primary school since 1999. One aspect of SPHE is media education.

With children spending more time online as part of distance learning, they are increasingly being exposed to different forms of media, i.e. advertising and their influences.

MediaWise is a free Irish educational programme that provides lessons for pupils from Junior Infants to 6th class. It aims to enable children to understand what media is, how advertising works and how media and advertising can influence how we feel; how we think and eventually what we buy.
To access the programme click HERE.

During the school closure period, why not take some time for SPHE and raise your own and your child’s awareness and understanding of media and its impact on our daily lives, our thoughts and our personal behaviour.

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Covid-19 – Chief Medical Officer’s Advice To Parents

The Chief Medical Officer from the Department of Health, Dr Tony Holohan, has issued the following letter to parents of school children travelling from affected regions.

The Department of Education and Skills has updated information for schools, preschools and third level institutions on Covid-19; provided by the Department of Health and HSE Health Protection Surveillance Centre, following a meeting of the National Public Health Emergency Team.

Public health doctors are available to liaise with schools and advise on precautions if staff and / or students have any concerns.

Anyone who has visited affected regions in the last 14 days and has a cough, shortness of breath, breathing difficulties or fever should self-isolate and phone their GP immediately.

Anyone who has travelled from the affected regions and has no symptoms should visit HERE for further advice.

The most important action we can take to protect ourselves from Covid-19 is regular hand-washing and good respiratory hygiene.

As further advice or information is provided, it will be issued to schools and posted on the Department’s website.

Travel advice for all Irish citizens is provided through the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

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Challenges To Environment & Public Health Require Aggressive, Coherent Action.

Ireland is living beyond its carbon and environmental means. If we begin to start the necessary change now, we can also start to imagine a better future.

Section of River Suir, Thurles, Co. Tipperary, as observed on September 19th 2019.

EPA’s body of scientific evidence serves as a national asset for the public good.

Ms Laura Burke, [Director General of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)], informed the 15th Annual Environment Ireland Conference today that Ireland is living beyond its carbon and environmental means. Ms Burke also said that the climate emergency we face is something that has been well flagged by evidence from scientists worldwide, including the EPA.

“It is now accepted globally that we are facing a climate emergency but it has not arrived suddenly or without warning. The build-up of pollutants in our atmosphere and waters, the gradual loss of biodiversity, the contamination of land – these are insidious, incremental challenges to our environment and health that have been borne out by scientific evidence, including that of the EPA, for many years. What we now need is urgent transformational change based on what the evidence is telling us.”

Section of River Suir, Thurles, Co. Tipperary, as observed on September 19th 2019.

Opening the conference, the Minister for Communications, Climate Action and Environment Mr Richard Bruton T.D. stated,
“The Climate Action Plan is our roadmap to step up our response to climate disruption. It will ensure we meet our 2030 climate commitments. It will mean warmer homes, cleaner air and healthier lives. It will put our economy on a more sustainable path for future generations. We must now take urgent action and implement the policies we have committed to. It is a rolling plan, designed to integrate best practice as it emerges and adapt to emerging new technologies.”

Ms Burke challenged both the public and policy-makers to step up to the challenge and take action, saying by doing so we can imagine a better future.
“It is up to us – as individuals – to take ownership of environmental issues and take action, both in our personal and business lives. Actions on a personal level to reduce carbon consumption have the associated benefits of healthier lives, better air quality and more local connection and engagement. We need to use our power as individuals to ask questions, and to support those who are addressing issues and genuinely trying to make a difference.”

On the importance of strong evidence, Ms Burke continued:
“One of the EPA’s primary functions is using scientific evidence to protect and improve our natural environment and human health – this knowledge is a key national resource. The EPA recognises the significant responsibility for producing such evidence. There are real implications for environmental, human health and economic outcomes determined through such responsibilities. Not least of which is our role is providing evidence-based contributions to national policy making. The EPA has, over the last 25 years, built up critical national data, which now serves as a national asset for the public good.”

Ms Burke also cautioned that the challenges remain substantial and could be considered overwhelming. She noted an enduring risk of eco-fatigue, and more worrying, a growing eco-anxiety in our youth. She challenged those in attendance to find ways to match the uncomfortable evidence with optimism for the future.
“All of us have a responsibility to not alone bring forward the uncomfortable evidence, but to also build optimism through the identification of solutions, the celebration of successes, the embracing of necessary change, and delivering on commitments. And if we can use this power to propel the change necessary, we can begin to imagine a better future for ourselves, our children and generations to come.”

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