
It is important that parents actively participate in their child’s academic growth. Although parents have less control over their child’s education once they enter elementary school, they can still have a significant impact by offering constructive direction to their children, eliciting information from them about their educational experience, and closely monitoring their progress to keep them from dropping behind. Here are a few ways that parents of elementary school-aged children might anticipate the development of their children and what they can do to help them.
The American Psychological Association lists some expectations for children of this age in terms of mental and social skills.
In terms of mental skills
In terms of social skills
Good Parental Responses
To deal with the growth in mental and social abilities at this age, parents should be ready to adapt. As children develop morally, parents should be there to help them understand concepts like fairness that keep them from overreacting to their experiences and remind them to think about the perspectives of others like their family members, friends, and teachers.
As they become capable of more problem-solving skills with longer attention spans and memories, they can be taught practical skills to participate in crafts or housework.
As kids become more independent, give them more space but also display interest and pride in the things they can do without your help. Keep kids from isolating themselves just because they can, and stay involved in some way by offering help. If they aren’t ready to give up control, then take the opposite approach and encourage them to do more things on their own.
You may educate children to solve difficulties calmly when they are old enough to grasp the organization and step-by-step instructions. Teach children to detect issues, analyze viable solutions and their implications, and carefully consider the aim they wish to attain before acting. Being level-headed makes it simpler to convey new concepts and deal with new situations without confusing your child.
Each child may be different, but building problem-solving skills and empathy for others goes a long way in this stage of development. As kids grow, they struggle with new experiences and absorb a great deal of information from parents, school, and their surroundings. Parents can connect with their new experiences to help them take the right lessons from their growing social and mental skills.