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4Cures
for kindergarten jitters
Parent Spot for
Parents of Pre-School Students
If your child will
become a kindergartner in the fall, congratulations! Your child
is about to embark on a great adventure.
Although
this change can be filled with new discoveries, the anticipation
of what is to come may be unsettling. The uneasiness that your
child might feel is not only understandable, it’s normal. Even
if he/she has been involved in a preschool or day care program,
kindergarten is the beginning of a more mature phase in his/her
educational career. For some children, kindergarten may seem
just a continuation of what they are already experiencing. For
them, playing and sharing with other children and the routines
that go along with a formal educational setting are nothing new.
For others, going to school may be their first experience away
from the security of home.
The
following are some tips designed to help ease the transition.
Use your child’s questions and individual temperament as a
gauge when deciding which and how many of the following
suggestions to try before the big day. For a particularly
anxious child, too many pre-kindergarten activities may only
increase concern.
-
Trips
to visit the kindergarten teacher and classroom, library and
playground are a great way to help entering kindergartners
feel at home before they start school. Point out the
cubbies, the nearest bathroom, classrooms of older friends
or siblings, and the offices of the school nurse and
secretary.
-
As
you walk or drive by the school during the summer, talk with
your child about the route from your home. Point out
landmarks, familiar houses and businesses.
-
If
your child will ride the bus, remind him about where he will
be dropped off and picked up each day. Assure him that you
or someone you trust (babysitter, grandparent, adult friend)
will be there to meet him when he arrives home each day. If
you will be picking your child up from school, remind him of
this and set a place to meet that is familiar to you both.
-
When
choosing clothes for school, make sure that they are
kid-friendly. Jackets should be easy to put on and take off.
Zippers should move easily. Pants and shorts should be easy
to get out of and back into when using the bathroom. Have
your child wear shoes with Velcro closures to school while
she is learning to tie her shoes.
-
Start
your child on a schedule. It is easier for children to ease
into a new school year bedtime, wake-up time, and breakfast
time if they start to adjust their schedule before summer
ends.
Books
to help prepare your child for kindergarten
Annabelle
Swift,
Kindergartner by Amy Schwartz
Kindergarten
Kids
by Ellen Senisi
Miss
Bindergarten Gets Ready for Kindergarten
by Joseph Slate
Timothy
Goes to Kindergarten
by Rosemary Wells
Tom
Goes to Kindergarten
by Margaret Wild
A
Dragon in My Backpack
by Elvira Woodruff
For permission to
reprint this article, please contact the Capital Region BOCES
Communications Service by e-mailing
dbushsuf@gw.neric.org.
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