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Helping Your Child with Special Needs Get Ready For Back to School

By Carissa Garabedian, publisher of Know Different and Macaroni Kid Richmond January 8, 2025

As the new school year approaches, if you are anything like me, you are already working on a plan and strategy to make the school year a success for your child.
This is not easy and requires work ALL the time -- I am sure you can all agree with that!

Here are some ideas I have come up with to help me, and hopefully you as well.

1. Communicate
Schedule a time to sit down with your child’s teachers before school starts back up, or if that's not possible, during the first couple weeks of school. I tend to follow this up in an email as well. Communication is key, the more you can provide, the better. I suggest setting something up to help with shared communication during the rest of the year. A notebook, Google doc, or whatever works best for you.

2. Plan Some Activities that Incorporate Learning
We have started 10 -15 minutes a day of computer work, we did slack off in the middle of summer break, but have stepped this up for the last few weeks so the ease back into school will not be as tough. We are also finding ways to add some reading in. One thing we are doing that is fun is taking turns all reading out loud to one another. Another great idea -- grab a notebook and write or draw something you did every day. Even if it is brief, it will reinforce a great habit and help to journal the summer.

3. Schedule Playdates
See if you can connect with a parent who will have a child in school with yours. Even if it is just for an hour, you will be helping to create some social connections and strengthen relationships, as well as making a familiar face connect for your child. These dates do not have to be long or complicated. A park, ice cream, or just a visit at your house for an hour.

4. Sleep
Start preparing your child for their school year sleep routine. If they typically go to sleep at 8:30, but this summer they have been up until 10 pm (yes, that is our house), start making that time a little earlier every week so when the night before school arrives, it won’t be such a shocker!

5. Get Organized
This one is for you as well as your child, create some strategies to get organized this year. A place for school papers, supplies, and the calendar of all the dates you will need to know. I have a bulletin board for each of my kids with a folder that I store papers for each one. It makes a big difference for me when I need to find something!

I hope you find these tips helpful and that they offer you and your child some success in the new school year.

PS- Make sure you find time for some last minute fun & memories!


Carissa Garabedian is the publisher of Know Different and mother to a special needs child in Richmond, Virginia. Carissa also publishes the award-winning Macaroni Kid of Richmond.