Keep Your Visual Kids’ Skills Sharp this Summer by Making a Plan
A summer schedule with room for free play and plenty of choices will keep kids learning, having fun, and allow for a smooth transition into the next school year, not to mention help prevent summer burnout for both you and the kids. Begin your morning with making beds, brushing teeth, getting dressed and eating breakfast. […]







This summer add some creativity to your schedule and take a trip to your local art museum. If taking your children to a museum is not your idea of a good time, here are some tips to make the process a bit more enjoyable:
Have you seen the newest coloring page from Young Rembrandts? It is awesome for any artist in your life. Take a break and have some fun with this Artist coloring page for kids and adults.
Given Young Rembrandts art education focus, is it important that franchisees be established in the arts to ensure success? Just as with any business, a passion for driving growth is important for success, as is a belief in the franchise’s mission of quality arts education.
If your child has been diagnosed with ADD or ADHD, you’ve already put some new things in place and their grades or behavior still hasn’t improved, you might be thinking…. NOW WHAT?!? If you have a child with ADD chances are they are also visual learners.
There are significant benefits to writing by hand; the better visual students write the better they learn. Regular practice helps young writers develop mastery and gain a level of unconscious competency that allows them to focus on their classroom work.
I have created a list of things that you can do instead of the traditional barbecue to celebrate a free day off from work. Why not try a couple?
Young Rembrandts classes are fun, engaging and educational. Students learn fundamental drawing skills and develop core learning skills that prepare them for future artistic and academic success.
I’m a huge fan of creative play, inside and outside the house. When you head to Disneyland – all the creating has been done for you. You walk around seeing what other people imagined. But when you give kids the time, place and encouragement for unstructured play, their brains have to do the work. They climb trees, build forts, imagine new worlds, and spend hours and hours discovering new parts of themselves.