Pick a few hours each day that can be dedicated to studying and doing homework. Stick to this time as best you can, as keeping to a routine will help your child learn to set aside time for these tasks on their own as they get older.  If the study schedule can’t be the same from day to day, keep it constant from week to week. This way, your weekly routine is stable and recognizable for your child. Break study time up into a few blocks of 1-2 hours if necessary. One block can occur right after school, and then another right after dinner. Especially when your child is younger, they’ll need your help to stay on top of assignments. Ask your child’s teachers for lists of their weekly homework, as well as updates on bigger, months-long projects.     These lists may be online. If so, print them out and post them somewhere both you and your child see them every day. By middle and high school, teachers usually give syllabi that cover half or even the whole year. If your older child still needs guidance, ask them if they’d be willing to share those syllabi so you can help them keep track of due dates. Buy a big desk calendar at a school supplies store or online. Sit down with your child’s lists of assignments and syllabi and fill in all the big due dates for assignments, tests, school breaks, and extracurricular events.  Filling in exciting things like winter break and the school play is as important as writing down the big science project. It’ll give your child something to be excited about when they check their calendar. Once they can write well, have your child be the one to do the writing. This will help them memorize dates as well as feel like the calendar is really theirs. You should also buy a planner to help your child make daily and weekly to-do lists. This can include smaller, short-term assignments as well as the bigger ones.  You can also use the planner to help your child remember to do daily or weekly chores. Teach them to get excited about checking things off their to-do list. You can give them stickers and markers to make writing in their planner more fun and personal. Especially for learning formulas in math and science and memorizing vocabulary in language classes, flashcards can be the perfect study tool. Break out the index cards and markers. Show your child that they can use flashcards to quiz themselves or a friend. When your child is younger, you can create flashcards with them and quiz them with the flashcards. As they get older, you can encourage your child to be more independent by coaching them as they make the flashcards and helping them find ways to study with the flashcards on their own. When they’re reading, tell your child to take notes or highlight the text. This will help them really engage with the material.  Sit with them the first few times they take notes or highlight. Be sure they know not to take notes on or highlight everything they read. Emphasize key terms, big dates, and important definitions. Show your child different ways of organizing their notes. For example, they could keep one sheet for terms and definitions, another for listing dates, and one more for jotting down answers to big-picture questions like “what’s the major theme of this story?” or “what’s the global significance of the American Revolution?”
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One-sentence summary -- Set a study schedule to create a routine. Collect your child’s weekly or monthly lesson plans. Help your child make a calendar to keep track of assignments. Teach your child how to use a planner for daily and weekly tasks. Teach your child to make flashcards to do well on quizzes and tests. Encourage your child to take good notes while studying.

Q: Pour 1 cup (240 milliliters) water and ¼ cup (60 milliliters) bleach into a container. Add the leaves, and leave them there until they turn white. This will typically take about 20 minutes, but it may take longer for darker or thicker leaves. If you made a lot of skeleton leaves, you may have to work in a few batches for this step. Do not overcrowd the container you are bleaching them in. Fill a clean container with cool to lukewarm water. Dip the leaves into the water, one by one, then set them down onto a paper towel. The water will get rid of any excess bleach and stop the bleaching process If you want the leaves to dry flat, place them between two sheets of paper towel, then stack some heavy books on top of them. If you want more natural-looking leaves, allow them to dry on a paper towel without anything on top. Without anything weighing them down, the leaves will curl and warp slightly as they dry. This process should take about 20 minutes. Mix water with enough food coloring or liquid watercolor to get the shade you want. Soak the leaves in the solution for up to 20 minutes, then lift them out. Rinse them in fresh water, then left them dry using the same method as before:  If you want flat leaves, sandwich them between paper towels, then stack books on them. If you want natural leaves, let them dry on a paper towel. Pour your desired colors into small cups or caps. Use a soft, watercolor paintbrush to paint the leaves with the dye. You can paint the leaves a solid color, or you can paint bands to create an ombre effect. Let the leaves dry between two books when you are done. Avoid using brushes with stiff bristles; they can damage the leaf skeletons. Set the leaves down onto a paper towel. Lightly spray them with metallic spray paint. Use a pair of tweezers to lift the leaves up. Transfer them to a clean paper towel, and let them dry. Repeat the process for the other side.  Don't let the leaves dry on the spray painted paper towel, or they will stick. Use floral spray paint for even better results.
A: Use bleach to turn the leaf skeletons white. Rinse the leaves in fresh water. Allow the leaves to dry. Soak the leaves in food coloring or liquid watercolor for a dyed effect. Paint the leaves with liquid watercolor or food coloring. Spray paint the leaves if you want a metallic effect.

Article: It’s the blue icon with a white paper airplane inside. You'll usually find it in the app drawer. It’s at the top-right corner of Telegram. A list of matching search results will appear. This opens a conversation. It’s at the top-right corner of the conversation. This sends your phone number to the selected contact so they can add you to their address book. At that point, you’ll be added to each other's contact lists.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Open Telegram on your Android. Tap the magnifying glass. Type the contact’s username. Tap the person you want to contact. Tap ⁝. Tap Share my contact.