When the conversation is about school, listen for clues to problems.
School counselors say there are six common reasons for truancy:
- To avoid scary situations: bus, school room, tests or teacher.
- To avoid uncomfortable social situations: bullys, teasers, perceived
hostile teacher.
- To get attention at home: Mom (or Dad) provide more personal attention
at home.
- To stay home for entertainment (TV, computer games, play).
- To avoid possible embarrassment from going back after previous
absences.
- To avoid the inconvenience and effort of getting up to go, having
clothes ready to wear, keeping materials ready for school, or keeping up on
homework.
How can a parent help with these problems??
- Keep listening so you are up to date on school activities and
problems.
- Watch those late-nights. Often a child demanding to stay up is the
same one demanding to miss school the next day. A child short on rest is more
easily aggravated by a test, a teacher's correction, or a teasing student.
It's the same problem a tired adult might have. Allowing late-nights may mean
a whole day of trouble, an absence, or at least a big argument in the morning.
- Keep an eye on the morning drill for getting to school. School buses
usually won't wait and it's easy to make trouble for yourself by
procrastinating too long in the morning.
- Build support for school and school activities. Praise learning,
respect it, make it useful to your child, now. Let him or her: balance the
checkbook, do some cooking, figure out your next trip on the map, explain TV
news about science, art, or government.
- Volunteer. Volunteer in order to get a first hand look at the
activities and atmosphere in school. Volunteer to help make the school more
attractive for your child.
When an absence is unavoidable, try these suggestions to keep it from
becoming a habit:
- Limit entertainment for just staying home (TV, computer games, etc.).
- Check all excuses with a call to the school ("The buses aren't
running today." "We're supposed to get out early anyway.") Your child may not
have the right information. Even the favorite, "I'm sick," may be suspicious
if it always seems to come up on school mornings, complaints are vague, and
improvement is miraculous! Also, if your child is old enough to be left
alone, be suspicious if he seems anxious to get you out to work: "I'll be
alright - just go!"
- Don't allow other activities to take priority over school: "I need to
stay home to get ready for the soccer trip, practice my school play lines,
catch up on old school work."
- If you are suspicious but must leave your teen by him or herself,
come home at irregular times now and then.
For more parenting tips, click here.
|