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The Rural Voice, 1981-07, Page 31THE RURAL FAMILY Your child's report card BY GISELE IRELAND This is the time of year when scholastic achievement is awarded your children in the form of a report card. Whether the child hands this important document to you with a mile -wide grin, or reluctantly withdraws a crumpled mess of paper from the bottom of a bag. could hinge on your attitude throughout the school year. Most schools allow parents to interview teachers at certain times during the year to discuss a child's progress and prob- lems in school. A failing report card in June is an accumulation of difficulties that were also evident at Christmas report time. Attending the interviews gives the parent a chance to work on the child's weaker areas. Ron Hill, principal at Hillcrest Central School in Teeswater. says he can tell you in September which parents will not attend any functions in the school dealing with the scholastic development of their child. Can such a parent realistically be disappointed by below average achieve- ments? Bruce County schools have several programs to help the child with a learning disability. Some children just need extra help in reading and math comprehension. They have a chance to catch up in a lot of cases if both the parents and teachers work together. Bruce County schools send home a schedule of exams corning up, along with instructions for preparing at home. How many parents take the time to read this notice? •rhe environment for study that the child has at home is a contributing factor to his or her marks. No one can give 100 per cent to the subject at hand if there is a constant flurry of activity going on around. A quiet place, well equipped for the student's needs is essential. Proper rest and nutrition play a large role in the scholastic development of your child. It has been proven that a late riser who skips breakfast and hits the bus on the run will not be as alert as the organized child who rises in time to have proper nourishment and collect himself and his belongings before the bus pulls to the gate. This means definite hours of rest have to be enforced on school nights. This is the job of the parent, not the child. A few parents are called in after the March break mainly because their son or daughter has been involved heavily in hockey over the winter months, and as a result has slipping grades. Hockey is a physically demanding sport which could easily find the student sleepy in class if the schedule is hectic. These problems are easily corrected with extra work on the parents' and student's part. A marked difference is often noted at the end of the year once the winter sports season is over. The home environment plays a vital part in the development of the student. Are the children encouraged to turn the television off, and pick up a book? Children are offered a good variety of reading material both at school and public libraries. Students should be encouraged to read the daily newspaper and be interested in the news from around the world and in their own community. It is a world they will have to enter to make their living in after they leave the halls of the learning institu- tions. In short, the school is a place where the child learns about himself and the world he lives in. At home, the teaching function should not cease, but continue. If we fail to give this support to the student while in the formative learning years, we as parents have little cause for disappointment at a less than perfect report card. That report reflects, in a lot of cases, our attitude towards the learning process. Farm accidents kill 50 Farm accidents claimed the lives of 50 people in 1980 and farm machinery was once again the biggest culprit says the Farm Safety Association of Ontario's annual fatality report. Also, once again last year, tractor rollovers caused more deaths than any other type of accident. Rollovers caused 28 of the 50 fatal accidents. On the sidehill, operators often steer uphill when the tractor starts to roll. They should be steering downhill to counterbalance the roll -steering uphill just makes the tractor roll faster. A tractor can roll over backwards in 1.5 seconds after the front wheels leave the ground unless the operator hits the clutch or brakes. Backward rolls are usually caused by hitching equipment too high on the tractor or by popping the clutch. HOW IT WORKS; 20" disc. blades, mounted on individual pivots, are rotated by hydraulic motors to cut bean plants off below ground surface. Each pivot -mounted section rests on two depth wheels. Two or three windrows are produced, depending on the number of blades. The Smyth Bean Cutter can be mounted on the front or on the rear of a tractor. This compact machine is not bothered by mud or trash. Canada's first rotary bean cutter is a product of the George Smyth Welding and Machine Shop. THE FIRST NEW IDEA IN BEAN PULLING IN 70 YEARS SMYTH Welding and Machine Shop RR 2, Auburn, Ontario (519) 529-7212 THE RURAL VOICE/JULY 1981 PG. 2y