We wanted to bring back one of our first blog posts written by Mrs. Sarah Harper our Middle School principal. Starting a new school, coming into middle school, or returning after a whole summer off can be tough! Middle isn't easy but here are some tips that can ease the transition.
The trouble with middle school is that it is full of middle schoolers! Yes, middle school can be a time of awkwardness and self-doubt but it can also be a wonderful time of transformation toward independence. The amount of change, development and growth that happens during middle school is just as much as it was from birth to age three! Navigating this can be challenging for both teens and parents.
Here are five tips from the trenches, as a mom of teenage girls and middle school principal.
Advocating for oneself is an important skill your teen will learn over the next three years. Speaking up for themselves and learning to seek help and guidance from other adults is a critical life long skill. Here are a few examples:
Middle school, and life for that matter, will be much more enjoyable if students engage in the life and community of their school by trying something new. Here are a few ideas:
This is very difficult for parents, sometimes even painful. However, the greatest lessons in life are learned from mistakes; which will not only help your child handle the bumps and bruises of middle school but will equip them to launch into adulthood when it is time.
One of the most important things we try to prepare students for is being able to handle not only times of success but also times of failure. Your student may not make it on the first team they tryout for, they could have been given an ensemble part instead of the lead they so badly wanted, or maybe the first kids they met are not exactly the friends they thought they would be...all in all, continue to encourage them to TRY. Trying new things and then working through the tough times that might come teaches students how to be brave as well as follow through. For more on this topic, check out this post Raising Exceptional Kids.
What is important to you such as academics, grades and homework is not as important to your middle school student. Your teen’s priorities will now become all things social: Friends, girls/boys and their extra-curricular activities. This is OK as it is part of normal adolescent development. Consider the following:
How is that for liberating!?!? While all around good habits formed in middle school will have a lasting affect on their future education and life, your student’s middle school performance is of no interest to colleges and universities. This is 5th on the list for a reason, it supports tips 1-4! The stakes of life are actually quite low in middle school. Your child’s judgment, reasoning and reality are often skewed simply because their brain is still developing in those areas. Thank goodness none of us are judged based on our days from 6th-8th grade.
Everyone Prepared!
While middle school can be hard, it doesn’t have to be miserable. Be thoughtful about the messages you are sending your kids concerning this new adventure. Are you allowing your own anxiety to fill their heads with the idea that middle school is rough and you just have to suffer through it and try to survive? Or are you letting your kids know that it’s going to be exciting, energizing, challenging and new? Your kids will mirror the energy and attitude you project. As our mission statement at Faith Lutheran Middle School & High School says, Everyone Prepared! Everyone Saved! Remember these tips and prepare for middle school journey. Put on your seatbelt and enjoy the beautiful ride!
Mrs. Sarah Harper serves as the Middle School Principal at Faith Lutheran High School in Las Vegas, NV.