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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, February 9, 2006

Get your teen back on track

Advertiser Staff

If your teen is avoiding school:

  • Talk to your teenager about why he doesn't want to go to school.

  • Inform the principal, guidance counselor and school nurse about the situation.

  • After steps have been taken to rectify the upsetting circumstances, insist that your teen return to school immediately.

  • Severe phobias may require gradual re-entry to school.

  • After five days of anxiety-related absences, it may be time to visit a pediatrician.

    Source: The American Academy of Pediatrics

    SCHOOLS REDEEMING HI-5¢ COULD WIN $1,000 MORE

    Reynolds Recycling is offering public and private schools on O'ahu, Maui and Kaua'i a way to teach students about the importance of protecting the environment and raise money at the same time.

    The 2006 Cans for Cash Fund-raising Challenge asks participating schools to help reach a collective goal of 1,275,194 bottles and cans — one for every person in the state. Each school will receive the HI-5¢ redemption value for each container collected.

    Reynolds will also award a first-place prize of $1,000 and a second-place prize of $500 to two schools on each island. To participate, contact Jill Tokuda at 841-4036 or 292-9985 or e-mail jtokuda@reynoldsrecycling.com.

    POLL FINDS PARENTS, TEACHERS ON SAME PAGE

    Most parents say their children get the right amount of homework, and most teachers agree, according to a recent poll.

    Even among parents and teachers who say the load assigned is out of whack, more say it's too light. Here are highlights from the poll:

    Enough: 57 percent of parents said their children get the right amount of homework. Most teachers — 63 percent — agreed. Only 19 percent of parents said their kids get too much homework.

    Disagreement: More than half of parents said they spend the right amount of time helping on homework, but nine of 10 teachers said parents don't do enough.

    Time: Parents said their children spend 90 minutes a night on homework, but another study says children estimate less than an hour.

    Source: Associated Press

    About the poll: The survey information comes from a poll of 1,085 parents of school-age children in grades K-12 and a poll of 810 K-12 teachers. The survey was conducted Jan. 13-23 for The Associated Press and America Online. The poll has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points for parents and 3.5 points for teachers.