Teen Education: Back to School, Back to Reality

Teen Education: Back to School, Back to Reality
MyTutor, our expert partners in tutoring, discuss 4 effective behaviours for helping your teen ease back into education

New uniform, new stationery, new teachers – we all know what that means. Autumn term is a blank slate for teens, and going up a year brings a load of fresh challenges. It’s exciting (who’s in their classes? What did so-and-so get up to over summer? Which teacher have they got for Geography?) – but it’s also easy for them to get overwhelmed.

As they settle in and get adjusted, here are some simple ways you can help at home.

1. Routine
2. Organisation
3. Frame of mind
4. Goal for the year

1. Routine

Lock in a solid routine at the start of the year. As challenges swing in your teen’s way, having consistency when they get home will help them keep their head together.

After school: There’s no one set way for your teen to spend their time when they get home. But if it’s consistent day-to-day, then they’re more likely to feel calm and in control. This way, as homework deadlines and mock exams approach, they can reassure themselves that they’ll have time to do it. Maybe you could incorporate a few hours of studying before dinner two or three days a week, and then free time afterwards.

Before bed: There are few things more stressful than chaos in the morning. Running around the house for a missing folder, book, shoe or art project – toast-in-hand – tends to set the day off on the wrong note. Avoid this by getting everything ready the night before. After dinner’s a good time for them to get their bag ready and list everything they’re doing the next day. That way, they’ll down their cornflakes a bit more calmly and head off to school in the right frame of mind.

A great tip here is to model these habits yourself. Explain to them how you’re balancing your work and home errands with everything else, and in time, it’ll help them catch on.

2. Tidy Desk, Tidy Mind

By GCSEs, it’s ideal if a teen has their own desk space somewhere at home. Even the most disorganised teens benefit from keeping the place where they study under control. They should start by getting their books and notes organised by subject. That way, when they sit down to study, they can grab what they need and get their head down straight away.

A TikTok-free zone: A teen’s biggest enemy when it comes to studying is also their favourite thing – their phone. Videos, games, memes and apps all battle for their attention from dawn till dusk. Learning to control their screen time now will help them loads at exam time and for the rest of their lives.

When they’re doing homework, their phone shouldn’t be on them or near them. If they’re working on a computer, they should turn off desktop notifications too, as WhatsApp, email and messages can all pop up on their screens when they’re trying to work (and look like they’re working!).

This is another nice way you can set an example – by doing the same. It’s true that kids are more likely to do what you do, not what you say. If you show how you don’t need to be glued to your phone the whole time (right?!) then it’s much easier for you to encourage the same behaviour from them.

3. Frame of Mind

Sometimes a teen’s harshest critic is themselves. If they convince themselves early on that they’re not good enough, it becomes much harder for them to excel. Start the year with a big focus on reinforcing their confidence. Emphasise what makes them special, and that they can achieve anything if they put their mind to it. Whatever gets them down at school, having an encouraging environment at home will help them grow resilience.

4. Get Them to Set a Goal for the Year

As well as focusing on every deadline that comes their way, it’s important to focus on the bigger picture too. In a 2018 video released to advise teens at the start of a new school year, Michelle Obama said “Every single one of you has something to offer. Something that only you can bring to this world,” and she asked them to set one big goal for the year.

Ask your teen to have a think about what’s unique about them, and what mark they want to make on the world. Focusing on one big thing to achieve by this time next year can inspire them with the little things too. It could be a set of excellent grades, to run a sponsored race or even to help a certain number of people by volunteering. Honing in on their individuality and growing their self-esteem makes a more motivated teen who’s ready for anything. With a bit of confidence, organisation and inspiration they’ll make this school year their best yet.

MyTutor
MyTutor provides stress-free tuition that delivers results. In face-to-face online lessons, if you'd like to source some extra support with getting back on track, MyTutor's one-to-one tutors offer face-to-face online curriculum-focused academic support as well as much-needed confidence boosting and mentorship. In their first lessons, a tutor will work out where they have learning gaps and how they learn best, and tailor all lessons to suit their needs. MyTutor’s handpicked tutors are subject specialists from UK universities and students improve, on average, by a whole grade in a term's worth of lessons (often more), so whatever your child's goals, they can get the help they need to achieve them.