Between the Sign-Up Genius requests and “Welcome to…” emails from every teacher, administrator, coach and scout leader, chances are your email inbox is probably full before you even get into the office.
And while you’re looking forward to the regularity of the school year, the overwhelm has probably started to set in. Your brain is probably full of questions, like “How will I manage pickups and drop offs?” or “How can I possibly have time to help with homework?”
It’s an exciting — but challenging — time of year.
You know you need to wrangle reams of paperwork and buy a small country’s worth of school supplies, but I’ve found there are also some tactical moves that are the “secret sauce” for a smooth back-to-school transition. As my high school seniors approach their last “first day,” I have amassed a few survival skills for starting the new school year on the right foot:
Emergency contact
After I took the second teacher call one day last spring, I had a mild freak out that I’m not terribly proud of. “Why do you always call ME? My husband is off today and is two blocks from home, I’m in a meeting an hour away.” “Well,” the sweet teacher told me, “you’re the first number on the parent contact list.” Lesson learned. Put parent #2 on there, if applicable. Maybe even in the contact #1 spot.
Attendance lines
If you have children in multiple schools, there are different processes, times and numbers for calling in sick children or writing early dismissal notes for orthodontist appointments. Put the name of each school into your iPhones now, with the appropriate instructions.
Stop the school supply madness
OK, so you missed the tax-free supply shopping weekend. No big deal. Print the list, but shop at home first. Gather all of the leftover supplies, glean from that, then make your shopping list. If you can only find the 3×5 index cards, not the 4×6, fine. Get them. Or don’t, and check back at Target next week (because you know you’ll be at Target next week). The point is, the teacher won’t use all of the darned 4×6 cards in the first week of school. Let yourself off the hook.
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