How to Help Your Child Prepare for School

Best Selling Author Daisy Upton, aka Five-Minute Mum, shares her top tips on helping your children get ready for school.

It’s a Big Deal for You and for Them

“The cliché is true: one minute, you’re on high alert to catch milky burps, then you blink, and you’ve got a four-year-old trying on a school jumper. As an ex-teaching assistant and mum of two, I have been on both sides of the school gates. But even preparing my little ones for starting school felt quite daunting and like a big deal. But that’s because it is. For them and us! I’ve written about the things we’d done to prepare – and, in all honesty, it probably didn’t include much of what you might expect. Teachers expect children to start school not knowing anything and will teach letters and counting right from the beginning. Instead, the skills they need are pretty basic and listed below, along with some of my tips to help develop them.”

Things That Will Help Them Start School

To Get Dressed Independently

“For shoes, cut a sticker in half and pop one half inside each of their school shoes to help them match up left and right. Let them regularly have a go at doing their coat themselves. Try not to zip it up for them. If their little fingers find it tricky, play with play dough at home to build hand strength.”

Asking to Go and Going to the Toilet

“In the months leading up to your child starting school, I recommend having regular five-minute chats with them about it. During one of those chats, explain that in school, they will need to ask a grown-up to use the toilet. They’ll have to remember to wash their hands on their own too. We sing, ‘Wash wash wash your hands, scrub them nice and clean, in and out and round and round, make those handies gleam!’ To the tune of Row Row Row Your Boat.”

Asking for Help in General

“This is quite a hard skill to teach. However, in any of the games we play, whenever my little ones get frustrated at not being able to do something, I always calmly remind them that they can ask for help and often mention that at school, the adults will do the same. In my Starting School book, there are example conversations to show the children what asking for help looks like and why it is always OK.”

Recognising Their Name

“They don’t need to be able to write it, although it’s terrific if they can, but being able to spot the letters in their name is helpful. There are games for this on my website, fiveminutemum.com. A nice way to start is by playing ordering games, whereby you mix up the letter order of their name and see if they can put it right again.”

Learning to Make Friends

“My Starting School book has a page to help show the children how to make friends. We often think children intuitively have this skill, but sometimes they need a little extra support. Talk to them about how to ask someone’s name and how often knowing that is a great first step to get-ting to know someone.”

Getting Them Excited About It
Getting Them Excited About It

Share Daisy’s gentle, funny guide with your child to support them – and you! – with uniforms, meeting their first teacher, getting to school on the first day, making new friends, finding their way around, having fun at playtime, asking for help, packing their bag, learning about letters and numbers, going to assemblies, getting changed for PE, and much more.
And, of course, this book includes lots of five-minute games and activities designed by Daisy to help your child feel confident and excited about taking the big step to big school.

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Coping With Anxiety

“It is natural for children to feel anxious or daunted about starting school. Here are some ways to help.”

HEARTS

“Draw a small heart on the palm of your child’s wrist, then draw a matching one on your own. Ex-plain that any time your child feels worried, they can press the special heart on their hand, and it will send a cuddle to you – and you will send one back! Practice doing this while you’re sitting to-gether, then remember to draw a heart on their wrist the first day.”

CALM CHATS

“Every few days, take five minutes to have a quiet moment with your child. Remove any distrac-tions, and just have a little chat about school. Mention their favourite things and ask them how they feel about school. Tell them what you enjoyed most when you went to school.”

PRACTICE THE SCHOOL ROUTE

“Practice the walk or drive there together before school begins. If you walk, point out the things you see so that they start to feel familiar. Take a little treat for the journey home again, so it feels like a positive experience.”

Try Not to Worry

“This year is called RECEPTION for a reason. It’s a welcome year. It’s a ‘let’s get settled into this new way of life’ year. Everyone needs to find their feet, including you, the grown-ups. So go easy on yourselves and your little people. It’s really just the beginning of the next big adventure.”

The Best Time-Saving Meals

When you seriously can’t be arsed, these recipes take no time at all.

Fried Egg Three Ways

Feta Fried Eggs will transform your breakfast! Try these three irresistible variations: sun-dried tomato, basil pesto, and chili crisp. Each one is simply to die for.

Recipe

Grilled Avocado Caprese Crostini

Grilled Avocado Caprese Crostini are an effortless and delicious meal to whip up at home. Perfect for a quick snack or light meal, these crostini are as simple to make and are very satisfying.

Recipe

Tortellini Pizza Bake

A quick and nutritious midweek dinner that’s easy to make. This one-pan cherry tomato sauce is loaded with garlic, capers, and sun-dried tomatoes, capturing all the flavors of pizza toppings in a simple dish.

Recipe

Tortilla Pizza

The ultimate easy cheat’s dinner. It comes together in minutes, making it perfect for busy nights. Plus, it’s a clever way to use up leftover wraps, turning them into a delicious, crispy base for your favorite toppings.

Recipe

Loaded Jacket Potatoes

From saag aloo to tuna melt, these air fryer loaded jacket potatoes are a game-changer for your midweek dinners. Cut down on time and energy by starting them in the microwave and finishing them in the air fryer for a perfectly crispy finish.

Recipe

Picky Dinner

When you’re too tired to cook, Snack Dinner is your go-to solution! This effortless meal lets you throw together a big platter for the whole family to share, or customize individual plates for each kid. Plus, it’s a great way to use up ingredients you already have at home!

The Best Throw-It Together Food Bowls

Healthy, tasty and, best of all – easy!

The Really Tasty One

Chicken Fajita Burrito Bowl
Chicken Fajita Burrito Bowl

Healthy fajitas = our favourite way to be good.

Recipe

The One We’d Happily Eat Every Day

Bang Bang Halloumi
Bang Bang Halloumi

Halloumi is always a good idea. Combining sweet and salty halloumi with an Asian-inspired peanut butter dressing and hearty grains, this buddha bowl is a filling and satisfying meal.

Recipe

The Breakfast Inspired Bowls

5 Breakfast Bowl Recipes That Make Life Easy
5 Breakfast Bowl Recipes That Make Life Easy

Simple, delicious and quick to make. Breakfast bowls are the perfect way to get all the good stuff together into one glorious creation.

Recipes

The One We Eat on Repeat

Spicy Salmon Bowl
Spicy Salmon Bowl

Serve with rice or salad and a large covering of your favourite spicy or sweet chilli sauce.

Recipe

The One That Boosts Your Mood

High-Vibe Healing Bowl
High-Vibe Healing Bowl

The vibrant colours from all the gorgeous veg in this rice bowl will make you feel alive and boost your mood. Fermented pickles will give your gut some TLC and the tahini dressing with garlic, ginger, honey and turmeric will help protect your immunity.

Recipe

The 10 Biggest Challenges of Having a Newborn in Summer

1. Keeping Their Room Cool

The Gro-Egg is furious. At this point, we wouldn’t be surprised if it started to emit steam and whistle like an old-fashioned kettle. We’ve considered investing in a Dyson fan, but we’ve not wasted £500 on something we’d only use for 5 days of the year since those heels we bought shortly before getting pregnant.

2. Enjoying the Sun

The advice is to keep babies out of the sun, which is pretty bloody impossible unless you adopt the nocturnal habits of a hamster. Cue: 11 different orders for pram fans, shaded paddling pools, tents and a snooze shade – which btw feel like the inside of a balmy tent at V-Festival.

3. Heat Rash

Oh good, another random skin affliction for us to panic about.

4. Their Hats Never Stay On

They can’t hold their head up properly, but they can quite adequately swat off a bucket hat off within 3 seconds of you putting it on.

5. You Won’t Sleep

The Good News: Hot weather actually knocks kids out, so chances are they might actually sleep longer than usual.
The Bad News: You’ll be waking up every 45 minutes to check they’re not too hot/cold/sweaty/dehydrated.

6. Babies and The Beach Do Not Mix

Pre-baby, you spent afternoons at the beach reading trashy novels and working on your tan. These days, you find yourself constantly shouting ‘DON’T PUT THE SAND IN YOUR MOUTH’ and adjusting the UV tent to track the path of the sun like a human sun dial.

7. Bedtime Is a Minefield

Sleeping bag or no sleeping bag? Blankie or no blankie? Sleepsuit or vest?
Damn it where’s that picture ‘Knows everything Nancy’ sent last month of the NCT group? *Scrolls back 2323534 messages.

8. Driving in the Car is Stressful

No matter which direction you’re driving in, you can guarantee the sun is piercing through the back seat window like a kid frying an ant with a magnifying glass.
Meanwhile you’re cursing the fact you keep forgetting to buy a car window shade, even though 25 Amazon parcels arrive at your house daily.

9. Hydration Is Key

Except they can’t have water. Or is it just bottled water? And how bloody difficult is it to cool boiled water when it’s hotter than the sun?

10. Breastfeeding Takes on a Whole New Level of Fun

If the heat of a small human on your body for 45 minutes doesn’t make you pass out. There’s a minor concern we might drown them in our under-boob sweat.
*Sitting in front of a fan to feed is the only option.