The Family Dinner Project

School’s Out? Don’t Pout.

As parents, when we think of the transition from school to summer, we often imagine it as a time of anticipated freedom and celebration for our kids. But many children have a hard time with this transition. They get used to seeing the same friends every day. They get used to a set classroom schedule. And then, suddenly, the sand beneath them shifts.

Last June I knew something was up with my six year old when he couldn’t wait to do the enormous summer “homework” package his kindergarten teacher had given her students. Even though he had the whole summer to complete it (in exchange for a “super sparkle” the following fall…a piece of paper with his name on it), he felt the need to begin right away. When I picked him up from school on that last day, he quietly climbed into the back seat and asked for a pen.  In the rearview mirror, I could see him writing away with intense concentration.

At home that afternoon, he continued to plow through those pages. And the next day, too. I tried to slow him down. To remind him he had the whole summer to do it. I also tried to coax him to talk about what he might be feeling. But he didn’t want to talk. He wanted to work. So I let it go.

About three days into this behavior, his chutzpah for the homework petered out. The mourning period was over, I suppose. Now, as the end of this school year approaches (June 28th to be precise; it’s a late one thanks to the snow days), I wanted to get a head start and prepare for the possible reactions to come. I recently sought out advice from friends and colleagues about managing this transition, and I thought I’d share:

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