Your Kids Schooling ' Do You and Your Ex Both Support the Same Goals?

Oct 16
07:56

2008

Len Stauffenger

Len Stauffenger

  • Share this article on Facebook
  • Share this article on Twitter
  • Share this article on Linkedin

When you are a divorced parent, placing the focus of your life on your child is critical. Insuring a great education for your child is just a small part of it. If you haven't thought through the details of your child's education and how you and your ex will continue to support them, here are some practical tips.

mediaimage

Because the process that underlies your child's education is far more important than what he actually learns,Your Kids Schooling ' Do You and Your Ex Both Support the Same Goals? Articles getting a good education is critically important and worth your attention. As your child learns to read, write, memorize, etc, he is also learning discipline, mental maturity, stretching to improve and enjoying the stretch and the accomplishments. He learns that interface with others needs harmony. Education helps your child mature in so many ways and I'm sure you can seed many more. All these things will foster success in the business world for him or her.

Here are some questions to consider when examining how you and your ex want to support your child as he enters school and progresses through it's levels.

1. Do any of your children have special needs at school?

2. How can each of you support those needs so our child can succeed at school?

3. Have there been notes from the teacher about your child's behavior or performance?

4. If this change is creating a downslide, how can the two of you address it?

5. What behavior does your child have when there's a problem at school?

6. Do each of you recognize it?

7. Can you discuss it with the other parent and decide how you will solve it?

8. Is your child as willing to do his school work at both parents' homes? It's not fair to the child to make only one parent the "good guy" or the "bad guy." Both should share this responsibility.

9. Have you noticed your child's school performance changed since the divorce?

10. have you discussed this with his other parent to seek a common solution?

11. Do your ex and you both agree on the school goals and performance standards for our child/children?

12. Have you told your children that you are both in agreement?

13. Do both of you hold your children to the same standards for school performance? Remember, continuity is something children crave.

14. Can you meet your child's other parent at school conferences easily? If you can't, what can you to to make this happen for your child's sake?

Your child's education plays a critical role in his emotional maturing, his successes and the fact that he'll get to feel good about himself. You can make his school years wonderful or unpleasant. Being on the same page with his other parent will go a long way toward helping him succeed. With the above questions answered, you can now proceed to creating ways to use those answers as a strong foundation and make education appear like fun and a rewarding challenge to your child.

Article "tagged" as:

Categories: