Get Organized For Back To School
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Make Back To School Easy On Yourself And Your Kids
Don't let the thought of back to school preparations fill you with dread. Your kids are probably already dreading the end of Summer's freedom, LOL.
Start now to get organized for the new school season and reduce the stress for everyone!
Here are some tips you can implement now to be ready for the beginning of school.
Simplify The Transition To School Schedules
- Depending on your child, as much as a few weeks before or as little as a week before school begins ~ start easing into a new schedule. This will make a gradual transition in their sleep cycle and not such a battle right when school starts.
- If your child will need after school child care, start planning or making those arrangements now. Don't forget about holidays, school off days, snow days, short breaks, etc. Planning ahead now will help you keep your bases covered later.
- Set down the rules for television, computer use, phone use, play time and/or going out during school nights. Make sure the whole family understands when study/homework times are. Establish bed times and when it's time to get up. Let your kids start their school year knowing what their schedule is at home.
- Does your child have a study area where they can do their homework and you can be available to supervise or help? If not, establish one now. Is it the kitchen table? Make sure the area is clutter free & perhaps store a basket with school supplies, a calculator, etc. for convenience. Where ever the study area is, it should be a quiet place (no TV or music) with good lighting. Supplies should be readily accessible.
Best Back To School Zippered Binders
So Handy ~ I Use One Myself!
Backpack Safety
- Choose a backpack with wide, padded shoulder straps and a padded back.
- Pack light. Organize the backpack to use all of its compartments. Pack heavier items closest to the center of the back. The backpack should never weigh more than 10 to 20 percent of the your child's body weight.
- Always use both shoulder straps. Slinging a backpack over one shoulder can strain muscles.
- Consider a rolling backpack. This type of backpack may be a good choice for students who must tote a heavy load. Remember that rolling backpacks still must be carried up stairs, and they may be difficult to roll in snow.
Time to Get A Cool Backpack!
Schedule A Doctor Visit Early

Now is the time to make sure your child is current with their vaccinations as most schools will not allow them to return without them.
It wouldn't be a bad idea to have a check up now too, especially if your child plays sports or would need a medical release for any other reason. Some doctors may provide a generic style form for your use, but you may want to check with the school to make sure they will accept it.
If they do, you've saved a step! If not, at least your child has already been seen and it should just be a matter of taking the form to the doctor.
Hip, Hip Hurray For School Supplies!
Making The First Day Of School Easier
- Remind your child that she is not the only student who is a bit uneasy about the first day of school. Teachers know that students are anxious and will make an extra effort to make sure everyone feels as comfortable as possible.
- Point out the positive aspects of starting school: It will be fun. She'll see old friends and meet new ones. Refresh her positive memories about previous years, when she may have returned home after the first day with high spirits because she had a good time.
- Find another child in the neighborhood with whom your youngster can walk to school or ride with on the bus.
- If you feel it is appropriate, drive your child (or walk with her) to school and pick her up on the first day.
Traveling To And From School
Review The Basic Rules With Your Youngster:
- If your child's school bus has lap/shoulder seat belts, make sure your child uses one at all times when in the bus. If your child's school bus does not have lap/shoulder belts, encourage the school to buy or lease buses with lap/shoulder belts.
- Wait for the bus to stop before approaching it from the curb.
- Do not move around on the school bus.
- Check to see that no other traffic is coming before crossing to get to or from the school bus.
- Make sure to always remain in clear view of the bus driver.
- Children should always board and exit the bus at locations that provide safe access to the bus or to the school building.
- All car passengers should wear a seat belt and/or an age- and size-appropriate car safety seat or booster seat.
- Your child should ride in a car safety seat with a harness as long as possible and then ride in a belt-positioning booster seat. Your child is ready for a booster seat when she has reached the top weight or height allowed for her seat, her shoulders are above the top harness slots, or her ears have reached the top of the seat.
- Your child should ride in a belt-positioning booster seat until the vehicle's seat belt fits properly (usually when the child reaches about 4' 9" in height and is between 8 to 12 years of age). This means that the child is tall enough to sit against the vehicle seat back with her legs bent at the knees and feet hanging down and the shoulder belt lies across the middle of the chest and shoulder, not the neck or throat; the lap belt is low and snug across the thighs, and not the stomach.
- All children under 13 years of age should ride in the rear seat of vehicles. If you must drive more children than can fit in the rear seat (when carpooling, for example), move the front-seat passenger's seat as far back as possible and have the child ride in a booster seat if the seat belts do not fit properly without it.
- Remember that many crashes occur while novice teen drivers are going to and from school. You should require seat belt use, limit the number of teen passengers, do not allow eating, drinking, cell phone conversations or texting to prevent driver distraction; and limit nighttime driving and driving in inclement weather. Familiarize yourself with your state's graduated driver license law and consider the use of a parent-teen driver agreement to facilitate the early driving learning process.
- Always wear a bicycle helmet, no matter how short or long the ride.
- Ride your bicycle on the right, in the same direction as auto traffic.
- Use appropriate hand signals when riding your bike.
- Respect traffic lights and stop signs when riding your bike.
- Wear bright color clothing to increase visibility when riding your bicycle.
- Make sure your child's walk to a school is a safe route with well-trained adult crossing guards at every intersection.
- Be realistic about your child's pedestrian skills. Because small children are impulsive and less cautious around traffic, carefully consider whether or not your child is ready to walk to school without adult supervision.
- If your child is young or is walking to new school, walk with them the first week to make sure they know the route and can do it safely.
- Bright colored clothing will make your child more visible to drivers.
- In neighborhoods with higher levels of traffic, consider starting a "walking school bus," in which an adult accompanies a group of neighborhood children walking to school.
Helpful Resources For Kids and Parents
- Discovery Education Parent Corner
- Make it an exciting new school year for your kids! Check out our creative and useful ideas for motivating them, now and throughout the year. Get tips and suggestions about fitting in, homework, sibling rivalry, and much more.
- Homework Help - Yahoo! Kids
- Yahoo! Kids is a browsable, searchable directory of Internet sites for kids. Each site has been carefully checked by an experienced educator to ensure the content and links are appropriate for kids aged 7-12. In addition to our directory, we also have a number of fun features, including Yahoo! Kids Games, Sports, and News pages, Movies, Animals, Science, and Dinosaurs, a Reference section, Parents' and Teachers' Guides, a Cool page, and lots more.
- Math.com - World of Math Online
- Free math lessons and math homework help from basic math to algebra, geometry and beyond. Students, teachers, parents, and everyone can find solutions to their math problems instantly.
- Algebra Homework Help, Algebra Solvers, Free Math Tutors
- Algebra Homework Help -- People's Math! Algebra, math homework solvers, lessons and free tutors online.Pre-algebra, Algebra I, Algebra II, Geometry, Physics. Our FREE tutors create solvers with work shown, write algebra lessons, help you solve your homework problems.
- HomeworkSpot.com: Homework Help, Science Fair Project Ideas, Math Help, Homework Helper
- Find the best K-12 homework resources organized by subject and grade-level at HomeworkSpot.com.
- KOL Homework Help for Elementary School Students
- KOL.com is AOL's special kids' service that features content and tools designed just for children on the Internet.
- Fact Monster: Online Almanac, Dictionary, Encyclopedia, and Homework Help — FactMonster.com
- Fact Monster is a free reference site for students, teachers, and parents. Get homework help and find facts on thousands of subjects, including sports, entertainment, geography, history, biography, education, and health.
Keep The Clothes Clutter Under Control Now

Before Fall shopping for clothes, weed through what they already have from last year's Fall, Winter and Spring.
Decide what will be worn again this year; what will be handed around, if necessary, or what will be given away. Definitely reduce the amount of space required for storing what's coming in.
Don't forget to check everything from socks and underwear, to everyday school wear to their sweaters, jackets and shoes.
Eating During The School Day
- Most schools regularly send schedules of cafeteria menus home. With this advance information, you can plan on packing lunch on the days when the main course is one your child prefers not to eat.
- Try to get your child's school to stock healthy choices such as fresh fruit, low-fat dairy products, water and 100 percent fruit juice in the vending machines.
- Each 12-ounce soft drink contains approximately 10 teaspoons of sugar and 150 calories. Drinking just one can of soda a day increases a child's risk of obesity by 60%. Restrict your child's soft drink consumption.
Back To School Lunch Boxes on Amazon
Need More Back To School Help?
Try these links!
- Federal Citizen Information Center - Back to School - Consumer Focus
- As summer vacations come to an end, students are readying themselves for the start of a new school year. As you prepare to send your child to school arm yourself with some helpful health and safety information.
- Back-to-School Tips - American School Counselor Association
- Connecting with Your Child's School Counselor for a Successful School Year; Articles For Parents
- USA.gov - Back To School
- Resources for students, parents, and educators in preparation for returning to school in the fall.
Before And After School Child Care
- During middle childhood, youngsters need supervision. A responsible adult should be available to get them ready and off to school in the morning and watch over them after school until you return home from work.
- Children approaching adolescence (11- and 12-year-olds) should not come home to an empty house in the afternoon unless they show unusual maturity for their age.
- If alternate adult supervision is not available, parents should make special efforts to supervise their children from a distance. Children should have a set time when they are expected to arrive at home and should check in with a neighbor or with a parent by telephone.
- If you choose a commercial after-school program, inquire about the training of the staff. There should be a high staff-to-child ratio, and the rooms and the playground should be safe.
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Bullying
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Help your child learn how to respond to bullying by teaching your child how to:
1. Look the bully in the eye.
2. Stand tall and stay calm in a difficult situation.
3. Walk away. -
Teach your child how to say in a firm voice.
1. "I don't like what you are doing."
2. "Please do NOT talk to me like that."
3. "Why would you say that?" - Teach your child when and how to ask for help if they are being bullied.
- Encourage your child to make friends with other children.
- Support activities that interest your child.
- Alert school officials to the bullying problems and work with them on solutions.
- Make sure an adult who knows about the bullying can watch out for your child's safety and well-being when you cannot be there.
- Be sure your child knows that bullying is never OK.
- Set firm and consistent limits on your child's aggressive behavior, if your child is the bully.
- Be a positive role mode. Show children they can get what they want without teasing, threatening or hurting someone.
- Use effective, non-physical discipline, such as loss of privileges.
- Develop practical solutions with the school principal, teachers, counselors, and parents of the children your child has bullied.
- Tell your child not to cheer on or even quietly watch bullying.
- Encourage your child to tell a trusted adult about the bullying.
- Help your child support other children who may be bullied. Encourage your child to include these children in activities.
- Encourage your child to join with others in telling bullies to stop.
Developing Good Homework And Study Habits
- Create an environment that is conducive to doing homework. Youngsters need a permanent work space in their bedroom or another part of the home that offers privacy.
- Set aside ample time for homework.
- Establish a household rule that the TV set stays off during homework time.
- Supervise computer and internet use.
- Be available to answer questions and offer assistance, but never do a child's homework for her.
- Take steps to help alleviate eye fatigue, neck fatigue and brain fatigue while studying. It may be helpful to close the books for a few minutes, stretch, and take a break periodically when it will not be too disruptive.
- If your child is struggling with a particular subject, and you aren't able to help her yourself, a tutor can be a good solution. Talk it over with your child's teacher first.
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Was My Back To School Organizing Page Helpful?

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Evelyn_Saenz Nov 29, 2010 @ 6:57 pm | delete
- Great organizational tips for getting back to school.
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LauraSchofield
Aug 8, 2009 @ 11:22 am | delete
- These are great tips. I think clearing out the clutter before doing any back to school shopping for new items is vital. As far as making the early morning struggle easier, I try to get the kids to arrange everything the night before. Also, a 'less is more' policy makes it so much easier to pick out outfits on a daily basis.
I've been preparing for 'back-to-school' since summer started really. We've kept our son in activities and classes at our YMCA throughout the summer - tae kwon do, swimming, water polo club. We also had him attend a 3-week-long 'Exploration 21' program offered at NIU free of charge. I'm currently working with him on academic review. This gets him back in the scholastic mode - we never let him get out of waking up and getting ready on time every day!
Great job on these tips! 5 stars!
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mysticmama
Aug 3, 2009 @ 11:09 am | delete
- Wonderful Resource full of great tips!
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BevsPaper
Aug 2, 2009 @ 9:49 am | delete
- Great ideas for back to school, Sylvia!
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drifter0658
Aug 2, 2009 @ 8:11 am | delete
- LOL..Rodney Dangerfield! One of my favs............great resource lens. I think just about covered everything here.
Will there be another High School Musical? Are they going to justify number 4 by scripting all the kids to fail their proficiency exam?
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