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Family and Parenting, Front Page, Lanae

You Are Your Child’s Best Advocate

March 14, 2009 by Lanae · Leave a Comment 


 Happily married for 22 years w/3 great teenagers...18, 16 & 16...yes, twin daughters born just 18 months after our son! We also have 3 small, very spoiled, dogs. After the twins came along I became a SAHM, and in 2000 I became a Mompreneur & WAHM. My priority is keeping my schedule flexible for my family, while doing something for myself that I love. I have a retail website and do everything myself, with the support and occasional help from my family. On Old World Limited I sell Bath & Body Products, Dog Items, Graphic T-shirts (including Life is Crap), Sunglasses and Garcia Ties. I believe in volunteering and giving to charities, both personally and via my website, and recently started Mama Bears Blog Follow me on Twitter @MamaBearsBlog. Old World Limited


YOU are your child’s best Advocate…until they become their own
One of the hardest things for many kids to learn, is how to be an advocate for themselves. Heck, many parents aren’t comfortable being the child’s first and strongest advocate. But you HAVE to!
Just as with picking your battles with your children, you must do so when being your child’s advocate. One of the most important areas is school. If at anytime you feel something is not “right”, or if your child complains to you to the point that you know it really bothers them, speak up.
Discuss the issue first with your child. A valuable tip is to not always assume your child is telling you the whole story. Yes, we all want to think our children are perfect. Reality check…they’re not ;-) Ask lots of questions. Give ideas of why the situation is what it is.
If you still feel something isn’t right, contact the appropriate person at the school. Remember to be polite, but firm. Let them know you may not have all the facts but you want to know all the facts so the situation can get resolved.
Stay on top of it until it is resolved, and always thank the school official(s) who helped get it resolved. Be a good example to your children on staying calm, achieving good communication with them and the school, and following thru. Over time they will take on these responsibilities themselves. Yes, you may need to intervene, or support them, but that’s ok :-)
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