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The benefits of a slow beginning

Updated: Aug 25, 2024




Dear Ms. Heidi,

My little one gets very clingy when it is time to start school and we have to spend the day apart. How can I help her adjust to being away from me?


Dear Friends,

As we teachers begin our own transition back from summer, I wanted to let you know

that our hearts are filled with love and compassion our young students (and their parents) who

may be facing anticipation, hesitation, or anxiety as the first day of school approaches.

I’m going to call this mixture of excitement and hesitation “separation anxiety,” even

though our students are long past the age with which we generally associate it. Separation

anxiety is completely normal and may appear throughout one’s life. If I think back on my

lifetime, I can identify this feeling whenever I faced a big transition: first days of school every

year, going away from home for college, starting a new job, getting ready for a move across

county…I even get it before I go on a trip.


Separation anxiety can be especially uncomfortable for children because they don’t

have the words to describe it or the life experience to know that it temporary. Some young

children are still developing the ability to form images in their minds of their parents that they

can bring forth when they are away from them. As parents, if we are sensitive to our children’s

moods, we can even pick up on their emotions and start feeling anxious ourselves! Because

children live in our emotions, their feelings become even more amplified by our own. Before

you know it, everyone feels unsettled.


One of the reasons we created our “slow beginning” to the school year is to recognize

our students’ tender task of transitioning to school for the first time or after a summer away

from familiar classrooms and play yards. We separate our classes into small groups and invite

each child and their parents to spend a morning playing with us. Together, you will explore the

toys, locate the bathroom, spend some time checking in with the teachers, and meet other

students and parents in your new community. Together, the two (or three) of you enjoy an

easy, peaceful step into the new year.


The second stage in our slow beginning is to have half of the class come for half a day.

Having had a positive experience from the shared playdate with parents bolsters the child’s

courage for meeting more friends and for transferring trust from parents to teachers. Having

less students on these half days allows the teachers to give extra support and comfort to

children on the first day without parents.


When the whole class comes together for the first “official” day of school, each child has

already had two successful and nurturing school experiences. They know where they will find

their cubby, what to expect with snack and lunch, how to navigate bathroom use, who most of

their class mates will be, and how much their teachers already love them.

Although our slow beginning doesn’t always eliminate separation anxiety, it can

alleviate the worst of it. As parents, you can remind your child how much fun you had together,

what you loved best about your play date, and provide reassurance about the room, the

rhythm, the play yard, and the teachers.


When you cultivate a calm and peaceful feeling for the upcoming transition to school,

your child can rest in your serenity. Remember, young children live in our emotions. The way

that you approach the separation predicts how your child will approach it. When you are

worried or unsure, you unconsciously convey that school is not a safe place to be. Your child

will react with increased fear and trepidation. When you smile and recall how special the

classroom felt to you, how happy you felt there, or how excited you are for your child to spend

time with new friends, you model peaceful anticipation and courage.


May you feel the joy of a slow and gentle beginning to the new year.


See you around school,

Ms. Heidi

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