A Smooth Transition to School Starts in the Spring
by
Lorna d’Entremont
Bio: I am a retired teacher with 30 years in elementary
grades. Special needs interests me as a mother and
grandmother of children with Tourette and sensory
perception issues. I have a blog
http://kidcompanions.blogspot.com/ and tweet
about Special Needs and family in general. My daughter
and I designed and sell an oral-motor tool for sensory
seekers at
www.chewelry.ca. Our Kid Companions are also handy
fidget tools for ADHD. My second career and being a
grandmother keeps me young at heart.
Are
your summer months marred by a child’s anxious questions
about his next school term? Is the first day of school
marked by tears and tantrums? Is the Fall term at school
a failure due to stomach aches and headaches resulting
in many absent days? What can parents do to make the
transition to a new school or a new grade easier for the
child and themselves? Back to school is always a big
transition because your child needs to cope with a new
teacher, more academic demands and probably a changing
social circle. Timely preparation can make all the
difference your child needs.
How to Get to Know the Teacher, the School and Classroom Routines
Spring is the time to start preparing your child for September school
terms. Find out as soon as possible who your child’s teachers will be
and schedule a meeting so your child can meet them. Take this
opportunity in school to visit the classroom, music room, washrooms, and
gymnasium and locker rooms. Go over the lunch routine and visit the
cafeteria. Get permission to use the school playground to familiarize
your child with the dreaded lunch break activities.
If your child will be using the school bus, check out the bus stop at
home and at school. Walk through the arrival
by bus routine at school, finding the classroom, the clothes’ hook or
locker, the routine for shoes, where the school bag and lunch break
snack go… go over everything because sometimes it is these LITTLE things
that cause stress for your child.
If your child will need a “safe person” or “safe room”, this school
visit will be the time to show your child and explain the support
already in place for him.
Also ask for the names of a few students who will be in the same class
so you can arrange play dates during the summer. This way your child
will already have a few friends to start the year well. Now with many
privacy regulations the school may not be able to give you a class list
but with a little detective work you might find out through other
parents who will be in the same class.
Take photos of all these areas and ask permission to take photos of the
teachers. These photos can then be used in Social Stories or Visual
Schedules you can write and start using in summer and throughout the
year.
Many teachers have write-ups with their classroom routines and rules so
ask to have this. When the time is right, perhaps during the summer,
include in the Social Stories these classroom routines so that it will
make your child understands what will be asked of him in class.
Facilitate your child’s bonding with the teacher by talking about
her/him often. Make your child understand the teacher is probably a
parent too and knows about children and how to help them. Explaining to
a worried child that teachers take many courses about how to help
children may comfort him.
Ask the classroom teacher what books she can suggest that your child can
read during the summer that will be helpful for the coming year. Do NOT
read the books that will be read in class because your child will become
bored and worst yet will want to tell the class about the story being
read. All the questions to develop creativity asked while reading books
will be lost on your child who already knows “what will happen next”.
How Can the Teacher Get to Know Your Child
Have a carefully written summary about your child and your child’s needs
and you can entitle it and sign it in such a way that when there is a
substitute teacher in class this summary is made available to the
substitute. Give this to his new September teacher(s) in the Spring so
she can be aware of your child’s needs and might read up on it during
summer. In case it gets misplaced give another copy in the Fall when
school starts. Always be proactive and leave nothing to chance!
If
you have a good book about your child’s special needs problems or a
picture book for the class, you could give it to the teacher or at least
have the titles written down in the summary. Offer to come to class and
talk about the special needs of children in general and include in the
discussion the needs of your child.
Some
parents have their child write a letter, dictate a letter the parents
write or even give a video to the teacher so she/he can prepare
herself/himself for your child…preparation works both ways and if done
right and at the right time it can make Back to School easier for all.