Your child develops social skills and learns to get along mostly through games and play. Even if she seems like a little adult now that she's heading off to school, your relationship and family relationships are still the biggest factor in her development.
Now that your child is at school, she is immersed in a world of learning and making friends. This also includes trying to understand the rules of life, morals, manners and family values.
Even with all these new influences, during the early years of school your home life and family relationships are still the biggest influence on your child’s development. The intensity of your relationship may change because you’re spending less time together, but your job as a parent is just as important as ever.
Your baby is now scuttling off to a world of grazed knees, tearful misunderstandings and fascinated learning. And when the blood starts flowing, friends don’t invite her to birthday parties and help is needed with homework, you'll be the first person she’ll call on. Your rewards: being 'taught' interesting facts-of-the-day, plenty of original artwork and realising that 'good' is the most popular answer to the question you will ask every day for the next 13 years: 'How was school?'
When children start school they are entering the wider social world. For the first time they have to think about finding their own place in the world and feeling part of a social group. Although you’re not there when your child is at school, there is still a lot you can do to help her develop social skills.
You can encourage your school-age child to develop social skills in the following ways:
Encouraging your child to find other people she admires (role models) helps her to work out what sort of person she wants to be. At school, the most important role model in a child’s life is the teacher. When you consider that around 95% of everything a child learns comes from watching what other people do (rather than listening to what they say), the 5-6 hours a day spent with a teacher really affects how they develop. Teachers have a huge influence on a child’s thinking, attitudes, behaviour and their views towards school.
Children also benefit from exposure to large networks of adults who have the child’s best interests at heart. These may include grandparents, relatives, neighbours and family friends.
As a parent you can help your child find adult role models by:
If you have any concerns about your child's relationship with her teacher, you might like to discuss these concerns with the teacher or the school principal.
During the first few years of primary school, children become quite preoccupied with learning rules. Games with rules become important. These help children to understand morals: what is ‘right’ and ‘wrong’.
To help your child to understand rules and values:
Collins, W.A., Madsen, S. D., & Susman-Stillman, A. (2002). Parenting during middle childhood. In M.H. Bornstein (Ed.), The handbook of parenting (Vol 1, pp. 73–102). New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum.