Under 5s childcare guidance for key workers
https://gov.wales/coronavirus-childcare-under-five-year-olds-providers-guidance
Support
Details of a helpline to support children and young people through this challenging time
Physical Activities
Here are some useful links to a range of physical activities to keep you and your children active List of online Activities
Become an Autism Superhero
As part of Autism Awareness Week, could all Key Stage 2 pupils please visit the website below and read the Autism Superheroes Comic and take our Autism Superheroes pledge. This will be part of our valuable work towards becoming an Autism Aware school. Thank you very much. Mrs Parfitt 🙂
https://www.asdinfowales.co.uk/autism-superhero-2
A letter to our parents
Dear Parents
You might be inclined to create a minute by minute schedule for your children. You have high hopes of hours of learning, including online activities, science experiments, and book reports. You’ll limit technology until everything is done! But here’s the thing…
Our children are just as scared as we are right now. Our children not only can hear everything that is going on around them, but they feel our constant tension and anxiety. They have never experienced anything like this before. Although the idea of being off of school for 4 weeks sounds awesome, they are probably picturing a fun time like the summer holidays, not the reality of being trapped at home and not seeing their friends.
Over the coming weeks, you will see an increase in behaviour issues with your children. Whether it’s anxiety, or anger, or protest that they can’t do things normally – it will happen. You’ll see more meltdowns, tantrums, and oppositional behaviour in the coming weeks. This is normal and expected under these circumstances.
What children need right now is to feel comforted and loved. To feel like it’s all going to be ok. And that might mean that you tear up your perfect schedule and spend quality time with your children a bit more. Play outside and go on walks. Bake cookies and paint pictures. Play board games and watch movies. Do a science experiment together or find virtual field trips of the zoo. Start a book and read together as a family. Snuggle under warm blankets and do nothing.
Don’t worry about them dropping back in school. Every single child is in this boat and they all will be ok. When we are back in the classroom, we will meet them where they are. Teachers are experts at this! Don’t pick fights with your children because they don’t want to do maths. Don’t scream at your children for not following the schedule. Don’t set aside 2 hours of learning time if they are resisting it.
If I can leave you with one thing, it’s this: at the end of all of this, your children’s mental health will be more important than their academic skills. And how they felt during this time will stay with them long after the memory of what they did during those 4 weeks is long gone. So keep that in mind, every single day.
Stay safe. X