17/04/2026
There is a quiet shift that occurs the moment schools close for the term. It does not happen suddenly, but gradually and almost unnoticed.
The child who once woke up early with purpose now sleeps longer into the morning hours.
Books that were opened and studied daily slowly begin to gather dust on the shelf.
The mental sharpness that was sharpened over the term gradually gives way to comfort, relaxation, and unstructured play. And before long, something subtle but significant begins to take place.
Retention starts to fade, particularly in foundational subjects like Mathematics and Reading. Not because the child is not intelligent, but because the mind, just like the body, responds to consistent use. When it is regularly engaged and challenged, it grows stronger, sharper, and more disciplined. When it is left idle for too long, it relaxes, loses its edge, and begins to forget what it once mastered with ease.
This is the silent concern that many parents carry quietly throughout the long vacation. They may not always say it loudly, but in their hearts they wonder: Will my child lose the valuable knowledge and academic discipline they worked so hard to build during the term?
The solution is not to deny the child well-deserved rest. Rest is essential for rejuvenation, creativity, and overall wellbeing.
However, rest must be structured and balanced with purposeful engagement. A completely idle mind during the holidays is the fastest way to undo weeks of academic progress.
A simple but consistent daily routine can make a powerful difference. This routine does not need to feel like school work. It should be light, enjoyable, and sustainable. Parents can consider the following practical steps:
- Light reading for 20 to 30 minutes daily:
storybooks, educational magazines, or age-appropriate novels that build vocabulary and comprehension without pressure.
- Mental exercises such as puzzles, Sudoku, simple coding games, or mathematical brain teasers that keep the mind active and sharp.
- Short revision sessions of 15 to 25 minutes: quick review of key topics from the just-concluded term, using flashcards, past questions, or educational apps.
- Practical application activities like cooking with measurements (Mathematics), writing daily journals (English), or basic science experiments at home.
These small, consistent investments help the child return to school sharp, confident, and ready to build on previous knowledge rather than struggling to catch up in the first few weeks.
At Cinac Royal Schools, we encourage balanced and intentional holidays. We believe learning should not stop entirely during vacation. It should simply take a different, more relaxed but still purposeful form that supports the child’s overall development.
The real question every responsible parent must consider is this: What kind of student do you want your child to be when the new term begins : refreshed and ahead, or relaxed but behind?