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Prepare For
The First Day Of Kindergarten
With These Activities
The first day
of kindergarten can seem a little intimidating to your
child. Make the transition easier by preparing him for the
first day of
kindergarten with these activities.
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Prepare Your New
Kindergartner For The Big Day
My son is only days away from his
first day of kindergarten. He is excited but a little nervous. I am
confidant that he will be able to start off his public school career
with a bang and not a whimper because I have done a great deal to
prepare him for this exciting new event.
Granted my child has a head start over some kindergarten students
because he attended preschool, but even so I took five key steps to
help him make the transition to a new school, new teacher, and new
experience. These five steps can help parents prepare their new
kindergarten student for this important life event.
Introduce The Space
I took advantage of every opportunity offered to bring my son into
the building where he will attend school. We toured his classroom
and school, attended the kindergarten open house, and every time we
had to bring paperwork to school I made sure to bring my son as
well. Long before the start of school my son knew which school would
be his when he started kindergarten. Long before the first day of
school my son was familiar with his classroom and the basic layout
of the school.
Introduce Key People
Make sure that your child has a chance to meet her teacher before
school begins. Simply having one familiar face on the all-important
first day will make a big difference. If your child will ride the
bus then try to introduce her to the bus driver as well. Attend your
school's open house or visit school before the first day to also
introduce other key teachers and staff members such as the school
nurse, librarian, principal, etc. The more people who are friendly,
smiling and familiar when school starts then the less intimidating
school will be to a young child.
Find Some Friends
My son didn't want to say good-bye to his preschool and move on to
kindergarten and elementary school. However when I pointed out the
number of his friends who would attend his new school he started to
get interested. When he went for kindergarten screening one of the
screeners included a friend from church who is also one of his
Sunday School teachers. Soon I could point out even more teachers
that he would know as well as how many students are familiar and he
soon forgot his reluctance to attend the new school. By the time it
he attended kindergarten open house he knew that one of his friends
had the same kindergarten teacher and that an older friend had the
same teacher a few years before. On the night of open house he was
soon meeting his future classmates and playing together like old
friends.
Go Over The Schedule
While I don't know a minute-by-minute plan for his kindergarten day,
I do know from talking with school officials and his teacher
approximately how my son's day will go. I have gone over the big
picture scenario with him several times. I don't expect him to
memorize his schedule even to remember much of the detail. But I
know that he likes to have an idea of how his future will unfold.
This same child always asks for directions when we are going on a
trip even though he is 11 years away from driving.
Introducing your child to the main events of the day will help take
some of the fear and uncertainty out of those first days of school
when so much is strange and unfamiliar.
Make Up Some Guidelines
Starting school will mean your child is likely inundated with a long
list of new rules governing their behavior, their schedule, and
their education. It can be rather overwhelming for young children.
While my son is learning the specifics, I gave him these three broad
guidelines to help him make better decisions about how he should
behave in school:
1. Listen to his teachers
2. Be kind to others
3. Try his best
Really, all the other rules he will encounter in school will simply
be refinements of these three basic rules.
Use these five simple steps to prepare your child for kindergarten
and to ease the transition into school life.
Additional
Resources:
Dine Without Whine - Free 7
Day Sneak Peak
The family friendly menu mailer - Dinner recipes that you and your
kids will love send to your inbox everyday. Christine will even
create a grocery list for you. Fixing dinner every night couldn't be
easier. Give it a try.
Deanna Mascle shares other early
childhood education articles and tips with her blog Teach Phonemic
Awareness at
http://TeachPhonemicAwareness.info