The Jewish Chronicle

How to make the move to secondary school

- Andy Hugh is co-founder of Heads Up Kids

ing the impact Covid has had on their friendship­s.

Lack of contact and online socialisin­g have changed social groupings and children’s limited capacity to be together for long periods of time. Some teachers have described classmates behaving more like fractious siblings.

For parents, there is can be a tendency to get caught up in park meetups and flurries of WhatsApp chats in an attempt to shelter children from the discomfort of change. We all want our children to be settled and happy at school but we can’t circumvent this transition. There will be challengin­g times ahead but these experience­s can build our children’s resiliency and capacity to manage adversity.

So how can parents and schools support year 6 now?

Friendship­s: help children understand that all friendship­s have ups and downs and change over time. Give strategies for maintainin­g contact and acknowledg­e that we can have multiple friendship groups.

Worries: normalise worries and help children understand that we all experience worries at times. When everything is changing, give a sense of security by keeping some activities, routines and rituals the same.

Opening up a dialogue: children need space to talk, think and share their feelings. You can begin a conversati­on with “I was wondering” or “I noticed”. Open-ended statements give children an invitation to think and process rather than feeling pressured to answer a direct question.

Power of positivity: teach children that life is filled with both good feelings and difficult feelings and that these can live side by side. While it is important to acknowledg­e and address difficult feelings, it is the ability to reframe situations in a positive light and focus on strengths that will help to buffer children against the challenges ahead.

Build confidence: talk about travel, homework, safety etc (which is also covered by Streetwise).

Process emotions: Heads Up Kids provides a social and emotional wellbeing programme for the whole class.

Patrick Moriarty, headteache­r of JCoSS, says, “Children making the move to secondary school in 2021 — even more so than in 2020 — have had such disruption to their schooling and their childhood at a key developmen­tal time and they and their families really need support and reassuranc­e.”

The Heads Up Kids programme, he said, “looks a great way to provide it, and if the community’s secondary schools can echo the same language and approach when they arrive, that can only help them —+++ and us to make the transfer process smoother.”

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom