Building a Supportive Environment for Your Gifted Child

When you find out you have a gifted child, it’s often more of a confirmation of something you knew all along. Your child is special, and they are likely to outperform their peers. However, being a gifted child is rarely that straightforward. Gifted children tend to feel the need to prove themselves, and they struggle to ask for help when they need it. Here are some ways you can be a supportive parent to a gifted child. 

Avoid Comparison to Others

Most of the pressure gifted children face is from comparing themselves to others. These could be peers who they perceive as being smarter or more socially adept than they are. Help your child by avoiding the trap of comparing them to other people. Telling your child they are smarter than someone else can make them feel uneasy. Comparing them to someone who is outperforming them can make them feel less than. Focus on your child as an individual, rather than finding others to compare them to.

Applaud Effort and Accomplishments

Gifted children sometimes need to be reminded that effort matters. They tend to be more focused on the end goal and accomplishing the next big thing. However, the small accomplishments along the way are what help them get there. These children also need to be reminded that, even if something is not a resounding success, the effort made to reach the goal was worthwhile. 

Encourage Relationship Building

Your gifted child may appear to live in their own world. Children with diverse interests sometimes struggle to understand the importance of other people. Encourage your child to focus on building relationships with others, and not just their teachers. Talk to them about the friends they’ve made at school and their relationships with other family members. Guide them in focusing on friendships and relationships just as much as they focus on the very interesting thing they learned about in science class. 

Provide Enrichment Opportunities

Your gifted child is likely to have a lot of different interests, but some will persist over time. Whatever they’re interested in, provide opportunities for deeper exploration. If they won’t stop talking about sharks, spend a day at the aquarium together. Go to the library, and see if you can find some nonfiction books that will allow them to learn even more about their favorite things. Help them find answers to their seemingly endless list of questions. 

At North Tampa Christian Academy, we create opportunities for every child to explore their genius. Students at our Tampa private school thrive creatively, academically and spiritually in a project-based learning environment. Faculty and families work together to inspire leadership through Christian innovation. Contact us today to learn more.

5 Ways Children Can Find Their Faith in the New Year

The new year is here, and now is the perfect time to get focused on faith. Many people use January to form new habits to start the year off right. Now that the holiday season has ended, the whole family can take some time to consider what their faith journey looks like. Here are a few ways your child can work on discovering their Christian faith this year: 

Regular Bible Study

There’s no better way to get immersed in Christian faith than studying the Bible. Help your child find age-appropriate Bible lessons to study over the course of the year. If you think your child is ready, see if this could be the year they read the Bible in its entirety for the first time. There are plenty of Bible reading plans available online. Whether it’s studying the Bible or reading it, the best way to build this new habit is to dedicate time to it every single day. 

Building Prayer Habits

Prayer is the best tool for making faith personal. By praying each day, or even a few times a day, your child can build a personal relationship with God. Encourage individual prayer, and pray together as a family. Let your child know that they can seek God’s guidance at any time, no matter what they’re going through in life. 

Worshiping with Others

For children, faith building often happens in a community setting. Joining groups at church or attending a Christian school can give children of faith extra opportunities to better understand what it means to be a Christian. Being surrounded by examples of living in faith helps children see how they can live in it themselves. 

Incorporating Faith in Daily Life

There’s more to faith than memorizing Bible verses and gospel lessons. Children find faith more relatable when it’s part of their everyday lives. This can mean treating others with love, respect and kindness. It may also look like donating to charity or helping a neighbor in need. Children can find plenty of ways to live fully in their faith and make it a focus of their lives.  

Seeking Spiritual Guidance

Sometimes, the spiritual path isn’t so straightforward, especially for children who are especially curious about the world around them. They may have a lot of questions that aren’t answered by simply reading a passage out of a book. This is where having guidance from spiritual leaders can help. The more a child can explore their faith and ask questions, the more invested they will be in their spiritual journey. 

At North Tampa Christian Academy, we have an UNCOMMON faith development program that helps children discover their faith through discipleship, celebration and service. Students at our Tampa Christian school thrive creatively, academically and spiritually in a project-based learning environment. Faculty and families work together to inspire leadership through Christian innovation. Contact us today to learn more.

How Project-Based Learning Helps Students Find Themselves

Along with learning about academic subjects, students spend their time in school discovering who they are and who they want to be. Many students find that extracurricular activities give them the most opportunities for self-discovery. However, there’s another way students can learn a lot about themselves while learning about classroom subjects: through project-based learning. Here are some of the ways project-based learning can help students find themselves. 

Collaboration and Social Skills

Project-based learning requires students to work together toward a common goal. One of the best ways to learn about yourself is by working with others. Students learn how they can overcome challenges, from the intrapersonal to the academic. They learn the most effective ways to communicate, often through trial and error. At the end of each project, they build even more on these essential skills, gaining more insight into who they are.  

Building Autonomy and Self-Direction

It may seem to contradict the previous point, but in many projects, working independently is as important as collaborating with the group. Each student needs to build their part of the project so that the whole can come together. While working collaboratively, they learn what they can do by themselves and where they need to lean on each other. Once the project is complete, each student can take ownership of their contributions.

Developing Critical Thinking and Creativity

Children who learn in project-based settings often find themselves needing to think creatively and critically at the same time. Leaning too much on creativity can create beautiful end results that lack substance, while leaning too much on critical thinking can lead to too much thinking and not enough doing. Each project creates new opportunities to make informed decisions with the help of teammates, who learn from each other in the process. 

Cultivating Passion and Purpose

Finding yourself, especially as a young student, means discovering what you’re passionate about and where you excel. Project-based learning allows students to explore their personal interests in a way that relates to the subjects they’re studying. Rather than being abstract and distant, academic concepts become tangible, and therefore more relatable. Students may discover interests they never knew they had and talents that they choose to explore outside the classroom. 

At North Tampa Christian Academy, we believe project-based learning puts students on the path to success. Students at our Tampa private school thrive creatively, academically and spiritually in a project-based learning environment. Faculty and families work together to inspire leadership through Christian innovation. Contact us today to learn more.

5 Benefits of Christian Education for Children

School is where children go to learn about academic subjects, but it can be a place to learn so much more. Christian schools teach children to be Christlike while they learn the lessons they need to learn to succeed in society. They do this by focusing on values and the gospel just as much as the fundamentals of education. Read on to learn about some of the many benefits of Christian education for children. 


Focus on Character Development

Schools with a Christian foundation teach with the philosophy that who a child becomes is as important as what they learn. Therefore, lessons and activities focus on how students can be the best versions of themselves. Teachers emphasize the importance of traits like honesty and kindness, relating these subjects to what students learn in the classroom. As a result, children have what they need to be good people as well as good students. 


Faith-filled Foundation

While Christian schools discuss faith in the classroom, they also provide faith development opportunities outside of the classroom. These can take place in the form of assemblies, individual Bible counseling and opportunities to serve the community. Students have plenty of room to incorporate faith into their lives. What they learn at school matters. 


Christianity-based Perspective

Christian religions focus on aspects of life like hope and love. While children can find love at public schools if they know where to look, they’re often surrounded by it at Christian schools. Looking at lessons through a faith-based lens allows students to put the subject matter and their faith into perspective. Learning about these qualities inside and outside of the classroom gives these students a unique outlook they can carry with them throughout their lives. 


Opportunities for Family Involvement

Along with faith-based values and perspectives, Christianity teaches the importance of family values. For that reason, Christian schools often encourage participation from all families. Some even require parents to volunteer their time to the school. Family involvement in children’s education sets them up for success and helps them gain the confidence they need to succeed. 


Emphasis on Serving Others

The benefits of Christian school go beyond the student. Students at these schools serve the community as part of the curriculum. Learning to serve others and becoming involved in the community helps children understand from a young age how they can contribute to the world around them. They continue to feel empowered to help others throughout their lives. 


At North Tampa Christian Academy, we offer more than a place for children to learn. Students at our Tampa private school thrive creatively, academically and spiritually in a project-based learning environment. Faculty and families work together to inspire leadership through Christian innovation. Contact us today to learn more.

Teaching Your Child to Love Learning for Life

Most of us start out inquisitive and creative, but after facing the pressures of life, some people lose that love for learning. Children who learn to love learning early on often carry that interest with them throughout their lives. Every day can be a learning experience, which leaves room for openness, curiosity and seeing life as an opportunity. Here’s how you can instill a love of learning in your child. 


Read Together

One of the most valuable tools for activating a child’s imagination is reading to them. Read a variety of stories, from true life adventures to science epics. When your child is ready, encourage them to read to you. The act of reading together makes reading a more engaging experience, which is important for developing, inquisitive minds. 


Make Learning Fun

There’s more to learning than reading and writing. Show your child how learning applies to everyday life. Go exploring together in nature, and have them record their observations as a science lesson. Play board games as a family to teach your child about storytelling, math and more. You can always find opportunities to learn together. 


Say “I Don’t Know” 

Every once in a while, your child will stump you. They’ll ask you “why” one too many times, and you won’t know the answer to the question. You may be tempted to make something up that seems plausible, but that won’t help them learn. Admit that you don’t know, and take the opportunity to learn something new together. Go on a research journey, and validate your child’s curiosity. 


Explore Their Interests

Children often cling to a particular interest — or several — and refuse to let go. Explore their interests with them. If they love butterflies this week, see if there’s a museum exhibit nearby that you can take them to. Maybe they’re into snakes, and it’s time to check out some books about their reptilian friends from the library. 


Ask More Questions

Teach your child to be curious by modeling curiosity. Open-ended questions like “why do you think that is?” and “how did you come to that conclusion?” can help your child look deeper into what they’re learning. The critical thinking process is an essential part of learning, and by getting those gears turning early on in life, you’ll put your child ahead of the game. 


At North Tampa Christian Academy, we hope all of our students develop a lifelong love of learning. Students at our Tampa private school thrive creatively, academically and spiritually in a project-based learning environment. Faculty and families work together to inspire leadership through Christian innovation. Contact us today to learn more.