They will make a tired child smile and brainwash.
Banal questions like “Well, what did you do at school today?” usually leave your child completely indifferent. But since you really want to know about his life outside the home, you can try to get him to talk with the help of the following extraordinary questions. We bring them to help all parents of schoolchildren, and at the end – instructions for use.
1. If you could start the day from the beginning, what wouldn’t you do?
2. What would you like to forget from today?
3. If you had a camera with you, what picture would you take at school today?
4. What book is your deskmate reading now?
5. With whom of the classmates would you like to be friends?
6. Does anyone in the class have parents who work in another city? How can you help such a family?
7. What books are currently on display in the book review in the school library?
8. Who suggested the most interesting game during the break?
9. Who is the best artist in your class and what interesting things has he painted recently?
10. Who made you laugh in class today? How?
11. Who were you sad about in class today? Why?
12. Has anyone sat alone at lunch today? What can you do if it happens again tomorrow?
13. Has anyone played alone today during recess? What can you do if it happens again tomorrow?
14. If your teacher had a large amount of money to improve the class, what do you think she would spend it on?
15. What kind of pet would you have in your class if it was allowed?
16. Who would be the best teacher in your class?
17. Who would be the worst teacher in your class?
18. If you had to teach the lesson tomorrow, who would you take to help?
19. What other profession did or did not suit your teacher at all?
20. What rule did you nearly break today? Why didn’t you break it?
21. What rule, in your opinion, should be added to the teacher? Which one to cancel?
22. What’s missing from your school playground?
23. What adult student made you laugh at school today and what exactly did he say?
24. Did you hear a good joke today? Tell it to me.
25. What did your teacher do on the weekend? Do not you know? Ask her about it next Monday.
26. What have you learned today that you can query on Google?
27. What would you like to know but did not know today?
28. If you could teach tomorrow, what subject would you teach all day?
29. Tell me about your plans for tomorrow, which may please someone else.
30. What would you definitely like to do at school tomorrow?
It will be interesting if you write these or other questions on cards that you put in a large cup. Have your student draw out one card a day at random. Alternatively, you can ask him to compose his questions about your day and put them in the same cup. Now I have to tell you both!