Parents can help ensure children return to the classroom feeling confident, according to MyTutor, an online tutoring platform.

As classrooms shut for nearly six months open, children are excited by seeing friends again or nervous to be back at school.

MyTutor and Alicia Eaton – author and specialist in children’s emotional wellbeing offer tips to help parents ease the nerves of their children and teens:

Be the one in-the-know

What does your child’s new routine look like? Will children be able to mix together at lunchtimes and break times? Will some of them be separated from their friends? The more you know, the easier it will be for you to explain things to your child more confidently.

Help them rationalise

Talking about our feelings helps us to feel close to the people around us and to feel better. It can be harder for children to do this as they haven’t always developed the vocabulary to describe how it feels to be sad, scared or excited.

Try to expand general conversations into talk about emotions and how we feel, as this will reduce the emotional overwhelm which often results in angry outbursts or defiance. A stroppy teenager might simply be struggling to cope with the emotional intensity of being so happy to see friends again.

Tackle social anxiety head-on

Even the most confident of teenagers will find the first day back at school a bit daunting. Children with social anxiety will usually want to avoid stressful situations and many will do whatever they can to ensure they arrive at school at the last possible minute. However, it’s much better to encourage them to do the opposite – arrive early and be one of the first. It’s much easier to strike up a conversation and feel a part of things when there are only a small number of people there. Turning up even 5 minutes later when conversations are in full flow and initial instructions from the teacher have been given will add to that feeling of being left out. And if possible, help your child to make arrangements to travel into school with a friend.

Talk to each other

Talking about our feelings helps us to feel close to the people around us and to feel better. It can be harder for children to do this as they haven’t always developed the vocabulary to describe how it feels to be sad, scared or excited. Try to expand general conversations into talk about emotions and how we feel, as this will reduce the emotional overwhelm which often results in angry outbursts or defiance. A stroppy teenager might simply be struggling to cope with the emotional intensity of being so happy to see friends again.

Expect some drama

Stepping back outside into the big, wide world will create feelings of sensory overload for all of us. The world will seem a noisier, busier place than it did before the pandemic started and children are particularly susceptible to this as their senses are still developing. They already experience the world in a much more vibrant way – sounds are louder and smells stronger. Don’t be surprised by a few emotional outbursts or episodes of crying to begin with, as it will take a bit of time to adjust.