Should there be a comma before the word so?

To provide children with the essential learning skills, so they can successful learners in life.

That is not a sentence; you have a dependent clause and a long phrase, but no independent clause.

Please rewrite.

Its suppose to be the objective for a sample job resume i don't know how to fix it

OK.

You don't need a comma in that sentence, but you do need the word "become" before "successful."

Also -- the last two words, "in life" are unnecessary.

Thanks would I use a period or not

No period is needed.

Yes, there should be a comma before the word "so" in this sentence.

When deciding whether to use a comma before "so," it depends on the context and the role of "so" in the sentence. In this case, "so" is used as a coordinating conjunction, connecting two independent clauses. To correctly connect these two clauses, a comma should be placed before "so."

To verify this, you can use the following steps:
1. Identify the purpose of "so" in the sentence. In this case, "so" is functioning as a coordinating conjunction.
2. Determine if "so" is connecting two independent clauses. An independent clause is a complete sentence that can stand alone. In this sentence, the independent clauses are "To provide children with the essential learning skills" and "they can be successful learners in life."
3. If "so" is connecting two independent clauses, then a comma should be placed before it to separate the two clauses.

Applying these steps to the given sentence, we can see that "so" is connecting the independent clause "To provide children with the essential learning skills" with the independent clause "they can be successful learners in life." Therefore, a comma should be placed before "so" in this sentence:

"To provide children with the essential learning skills, so they can be successful learners in life."