The Two Weeks Before School That Actually Matter

A mother pours breakfast cereal at a sunny kitchen table beside her young son, his packed school backpack on the chair
The dread usually lifts the moment the morning stops being a scramble.

You can feel it coming before they say a word. The afternoons are still warm, the backpack’s still shoved in the cupboard, and somewhere around the middle of August your kid goes a touch clingy and a touch wound-up, asking the same question three slightly different ways: do I actually have to go? And you, who have your own quiet knot about the 7am chaos starting up again, are supposed to sound breezy about all of it.

Most back-to-school advice hands you a supply list and a laminator. Useful, sort of. But the thing that genuinely takes the edge off the first morning is smaller, quieter, and it starts a fortnight earlier, in the dark, while they’re asleep.

The countdown that calms (not the supply list)

Kids settle when the day stops surprising them. The single most effective move is to walk their sleep back to a school schedule slowly, instead of slamming it into place the night before term. Pediatric sleep specialists at the Sleep Foundation put it plainly: shift bedtime and wake-up by about 15 minutes every couple of nights, starting two weeks out, so their body clock drifts rather than lurches.

Here’s the whole plan, and it really is this short:

  • Two weeks out: nudge bedtime and wake-up 15 minutes earlier every few nights.
  • One week out: run the real morning once: up, dressed, fed, shoes on, out the door at the actual time.
  • The night before: bath, clothes laid out, lunch packed, bag by the door.
  • First morning: one good breakfast, an upbeat song, and enough buffer that nobody has to be hurried.
A calm morning is mostly built the night before, in the quiet, while they’re asleep and can’t argue about socks.

What “I don’t want to go” is usually saying

The reflex is to fix it fast (you’ll be fine, you’ll love it!), which is warm and well-meant and skips straight past the actual feeling. A worried kid mostly wants to know the worry is allowed to exist. So before the pep talk, get curious: what’s the bit you’re not looking forward to? Sometimes it’s the teacher. Sometimes it’s not knowing where the toilets are. Often it’s something gloriously specific you’d never have guessed.

They don’t need you to make the worry vanish. They need to know it can sit next to them, and they’ll still be okay.

Giving the worry a name (even an external one) helps small kids feel less swallowed by it. A picture book like The Worrysaurus does this beautifully, turning a vague stomach-churn into a little character you can talk back to. If the nerves are more about the social side, our piece on school anxiety in children goes deeper into what to actually say.

A father kneels with his young son in a warm hallway, the two of them packing a school backpack together the night before
Sorting the backpack together the night before turns a morning panic into a shared ritual.

The walk-through that shrinks a big building

Fear loves a blank. A school your child has never properly seen becomes, in their imagination, enormous and full of unknown corridors. The Child Mind Institute recommends doing the boring, brilliant thing: take them on a walk-through before day one. Find the classroom, the toilets, the lunch hall, the gate where you’ll wave them off. Familiar shrinks scary. If you can swing a five-minute hello with the teacher, even better: a face attached to a name does a lot of the heavy lifting.

A morning that doesn’t start in a panic

By the first week of term, the goal is for the routine to belong to them, not to your nagging. This is where a couple of low-effort tools earn their place, not because gadgets fix anything, but because a kid who can see how much time is left stops asking you, and a kid who has a way to name a wobble can move through it. If mornings are a particular battleground in your house, our no-shouting morning routine chart pairs neatly with all of this.

A few small things that genuinely help. Nothing here is a magic wand, but each one quietly takes one job off your plate:

TALK ABOUT THE WORRY

The Worrysaurus

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When the nerves are something bigger

Most first-day jitters fade within a week or two of normal school rhythm. Sometimes, though, they don’t, and that’s worth paying attention to rather than waiting out.

Check in with your GP or the school counsellor if: the refusal is fierce and daily, the stomach aches or headaches show up every single school morning then vanish by mid-afternoon, the worry has dragged on for more than a few weeks despite a calm routine, or you’re seeing it spill into sleep, appetite and mood. Persistent school refusal is a signal, not naughtiness, and it responds well to early support. Co-parenting across two homes? Keeping the routine steady in both makes a real difference; here’s how to keep school on track across two homes.

Anyway, you don’t have to nail every bit of this. Wind the sleep back, have one honest conversation, do the walk-through if you can, and you’ve covered the part that actually moves the needle. The first morning will still be a small circus. That’s allowed. So is the coffee you drink standing up afterwards.

FAQParenting Tips

Frequently asked questions

About two weeks before term. Shift bedtime and wake-up roughly 15 minutes every few nights so their body clock drifts into the school schedule gradually, rather than lurching the night before.

Keep the evening calm and predictable: bath, dim warm light, no screens for the last hour, and a short, honest chat about what tomorrow will look like. Knowing what’s coming is what lets an excited or nervous brain switch off.

Very. Most children feel some first-day nerves, and for the majority it eases within the first week or two of being back. Validating the feeling (rather than rushing to fix it) usually helps it pass faster.

The odd reluctant morning is normal. But fierce, daily refusal (especially with physical symptoms that clear up once they’re home) is worth raising with the school or your GP early, when it responds best to support.

WHILE YOU’RE HERE…

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Nour El-Rashidi
Parenting Tips
Hey, I'm Nour
Nour El-Rashidi
Writes from the actual messtwo kids, solo half the weekno sugar-coating

I'm for the parent mid-meltdown - theirs or the kid's. I write from the actual floor of it: the crying that won't stop, the dinner thrown, the bedtime that unravels. Blunt because I respect you too much to pretend it's easy. Just what tends to actually work.

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