Calling all parents! Listen, we love your child, we really do. We learn more by being their teacher than they learn from being our student. We regularly take home the emotions that our school day served us, and sometimes not until late hours of the night. But full circle, we choose to be your child’s teacher and we are proud of it. Here are some things we need from you this year!
- Establish a routine that will help them slide right into the groove at school. The kids who respond the best to the new demands of the school year have kick-ass parents running a tight ship at home!
- Play outside! For the love of all things good, PLEASE push your kids out the door – and go with them! Playing outside in the sunshine, breathing in fresh air, and getting their bodies moving does more than you realize for them. Electronics do not.
- Support their emotions. We live in a day where emotions run deep but we aren’t allowed to feel them. Boys are wussy and girls are bratty if we raise our voice or quiver our lip. Here’s the deal – emotions drive communication and we are desperate for constructive and honest communication skills from our students! Let your child be a shining example!
- Be involved. If you volunteer to chaperone a field trip, send classroom snacks, and ask us to take a picture with our now, almost split-custody, child after the Winter concert, we will love you. I repeat, we will love you. We sincerely appreciate your effort and involvement in our classroom and school.
- Read and let them see you doing it. I don’t care if it’s Curious George or 50 Shades Darker – a book is a book. Monkey see, monkey do… are you catching my massive drift? Read. And then read some more!
- Call their teacher early on if something seems off. There is nothing worse than answering the phone mid-lesson and busting an eardrum before saying hello to the mom who isn’t happy with her child’s mid-quarter report card. Did you forget you have access to the parent portal, that she was absent 3 days because of the flu two weeks ago, and this month’s newsletter said our project wouldn’t be graded until after mid-quarter? Just checking.
- Accept responsibility as parents. Please don’t expect us to take over your obligation as parents. Practice self-discipline and respect for others at home – don’t rely on us to teach these basic behaviors and attitudes. I promise we will build on what you teach them.
- Check their backpack. I literally beg you. The permission slip needs to be signed, he took 2 library books home last week and they are overdue, and you’re invited to have lunch with us tomorrow. But it looks like Harry can’t go on the field trip, he won’t be able to check out a book at the library this afternoon, and you never RSVP’d to our luncheon. And that cheese stick is starting to smell. “Can you call my mom?” is worse than being called mom.
- Get messy. Yes, you read that right! Get messy with your kids! Swim with them in 102* weather and see who can hold their breath the longest, drag rice across the carpet like your seeding a field, finger-paint until you run out, and make as many DIY crafts and experiments as you can. You won’t regret it, and we appreciate the creativity and intuitive thinker you are raising!
- Eat dinner together. Pass me a megaphone: eating family dinner regularly increases vocabulary and academic performance, improves the likely hood that your kids will eat more fruits and veggies, be sick less, and it decreases potential behavioral issues and mental disorders!!! Ring the bell! Call the tribe! Gather at the table and have yourself a roast. Or chicken nuggets. They are fine, too.
If you pick a few things from this list, I promise your child’s teacher will notice. We love your child and want the absolute best for them. Your child can only benefit from these things!
And now I’m dying to know 10 Things Parents are BEGGING Elementary Teachers to do in the New School Year.
Cheers!

**I’m not writing this because I think you would ever do it. I’m writing it for ALL teachers in hopes a teacher may read it and realize he or she is making this mistake.**
Let’s face it, some people have children who really shouldn’t. Some parents out there stink! I have noticed sometimes teachers take their frustration with the parent out on the student though. Trust me, I can’t begin to imagine dealing with a parent who doesn’t care if their child’s home work is done, never signs anything, and expects you to be both a parent and teacher to their child. The only thing worse than being the teacher of a child with parents like that is being the child of parents like that. Please remember to take your aggravation out on the responsible party, and to give these children a little extra love and encouragement! God knows they probably don’t get very much of either at home.
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Luna, I appreciate and agree with your feedback! As the human beings we are, it becomes difficult to separate parents and children when we hold a stir of emotions each day. To be honest with you, I have made it my personal goal to love my students extra each day and remind them verbally that they are loved and I am proud to be their teacher. Many many parents are amazing, helpful, communicate well, and have outstanding children. Other parents are distant, but still have amazing children! It is so unfortunate that children do not choose their circumstance, but they are required to either thrive or survive.
Again, I loved reading your thoughts! Thank you!
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❤ this Katie! Your students are so fortunate to have you! (And I’m so fortunate to know you!) Here’s my $0.02 on a parent’s advice to teachers:
1. Please get a classroom app (my favorite so far is Seesaw) and REACH OUT to parents before spending a dime of your check on something for the classroom. Running low on snacks? Need 50 3 ring binders? Let us know please.
2. Don’t give homework on the night of the school concert please. Second note on that: flexibility rocks. If we can have 2 days to complete stuff, that saves us for the night where we have 4H, youth group, baseball, and town board meeting all at once.
3. Encourage my shy student to work with students other than his best friend. His best friend is really rad and they make a good pair, but I really want him to get to know all the other rad kids in his grade too.
4. YOU ARE AMAZING and so very underappreciated. I have no idea how you do what you do in a day and I am so very thankful you’ve chosen this profession. I would love to know how to support you.
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