<p>A relative of mine has SAT vocabulary words and definitions (which are also her son’s weekly spelling/vocab words at his school) printed out and tied with ribbon bows and hanging from the refrigerator door. Excessive…very excessive.</p>
<p>If it had been available when my older S was a high school junior, I would have gotten it. It would have saved me heaps of money in hot water as I’m sure it would have driven my S out of the shower sooner! :)</p>
<p>We used to have a shower curtain with a map of the world on clear plastic. Bought it because we thought it was cool. In the fifth grade my daughter surprised everyone by winning the regional geography test–the only academic prize she ever won. Claimed to have never cracked a book!</p>
<p>marite - Laughed out loud at your post! I also think that piping in the SAT words through a speaker would REALLY drive them out of the shower fast.</p>
<p>FWIW:A couple of years ago, in my naivete, I ordered my S one of those books with the SAT words in bold, more out of curiosity than anything else.What a joke. He said that every time he came to a bold word, it threw off his concentration! Never finished the book!That was the first and last attempt at “preparing” for the SAT.</p>
<p>bookiemom: I find it interesting you call your relative’s studying methods for his/her kids excessive, as there are tons of families who spend thousands of dollars to prepare their children for the SAT…</p>
<p>Actually, I think it is a pretty good idea, and if the graphics were attractive, I would buy one myself. I remember reading cereal boxes while I ate breakfast as a kid, from side to side, whatever was around was of interest. One of my brainstorms is that they run printed text below cartoons and kid’s tv shows, think it would really help reading. Nonreading adults could learn, too. Some of it becomes subliminal, not an effortful way to learn. Most of us can read that kind of thing while we think our own thoughts. The geography bee star probably was not all that aware she was learning.</p>