17 answers

Kids Grades

I used to be a stay-home mom, keeping on top of my kids schoolwork and outside activities. Since starting work full-time almost a year ago, I find that my kids seem to have gone amuck. Their grades have slipped, respect has slipped, fighting amongst each other increased, and I just don't seem to have a handle on things. Daddy helps and they seem to listen to him but it fades rather quickly. I don't know where I went wrong and I don't want to be a screaming hyena or a broken record. Any suggestions?

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So What Happened?™

Hello Everyone!
I've just copied and pasted what I wrote to one mom, but I am so grateful to all of you other moms too! I've been getting a lot of great advice and insight from so many different Moms and this site is AWESOME! Alot of what you shared made sense, and I did have a good heart-to-heart with my eldest daughter. I found out that even though she used to be "mommy's little helper", I'm no longer in control of her decisions and I have been inadvertantly "stifling" her growth and not allowing her to make her own mistakes, hence the rebelliousness and disrespectful tone. I got to the root of her problem and she did find college to be more difficult but at least she took her own initiative to talk to teachers and a counselor to see how to improve. I'm going to support her on that. As far as my other children, I have taken away priviledges such as their ipods, access to the internet unless I am in the room to make sure it's for homework (not myspace) and My husband and I are laying down the law as to what is expected of each one of them while they are under our care. I think we just needed another "family meeting" because we haven't had one in a while, to voice our thoughts and feelings on how we are all treated and are treating others in the household, as well as how we'd like to be treated. This has worked in the past so we'll do more often. Gives the kids a chance to unload frustrations or misunderstandings. Thank you Jesus the house is a lot more peaceful, I'll enjoy it until the next tremor arrives, lol. I guess I was feeling overwhelmed with added work responsibilities, my kids took advantage of my preoccupation. I just had to remind them that Mama is still "on duty" so to speak, and I'll be right there for them if they should need me. They "needed" to be reminded that they are still my number one priority and work came second.
Thank you so much for your sharing. Prayer works miracles, and I feel the miracle right now!
Aloha, C. N.

More Answers

I am reading a great book called 'Screamfree Parenting' by Hal Runkel. I really recommend it. It tells you not to take the kids actions personally. Take a deep breath. They are not out to get you. That needs repeating. They are not out to get you. Be consistant. If you promise them a reward or a punishment, follow through. Even punishments are promises that need to be kept so they trust you. Say what you mean, mean what you say. Don't make consiquences something that is going to irritate you. And remember, the worst that can happen is that they repeat a grade without their friends. Make sure that they know this, but don't harp on it. It will take them some time to get used to the new system. It is not an overnight thing, but you will be surprised at how well it works. Also, make yourself available for homework help, but don't stand over them with the ruler. Let them make the mistakes. Remember, if you do do weekend rewards and one or more kids haven't preformed, leave them home with the sitter, or whatever. If you do a little work, you can spend more quality time with your kids. It is not all about quantity. Let them see that you working benifits the whole family, not just saving your sanity...=)
They are not out to get you, they are just testing the boundaries to see if you are being consistant. For Kids consistancy = Love.
Good luck
R.

2 moms found this helpful

Hi C.,

Never underestimate the power of bribery! Actually, school is your kids' work so paying them for good grades makes sense while you're trying to instill good habits. As they get older they'll just want to keep up the good grades but giving rewards works wonders. You can also use the reward technique for fighting too. If they don't fight during the week they get to go out for pizza, ice cream or whatever on Saturday. If one succeeds and the others don't, take that one out. They are probably acting out because of the change recently made. Somehow, figure out a way to elicit their help so you can work and don't feel guilty because they probably sense it and are working to increase that guilt. The pre-adult and teenager can become your allies.

V.

2 moms found this helpful

I see this all the time as a school counselor. Did you know that it is normal for kid's grades to drop at least one letter grade during transitional times? Rather than stress about it, see if you can stream-line your schedule (simplify your activities and do what is only essential while you all adjust). Talk to your children. Tell them what the plan is and what their part is (be specific about what you need the outcome to be). Time management/organization is one of the most important life skills for emerging adults and adults alike. If your plan doesn't work, have a family meeting and have your kids brainstorm with you on how to solve the problem. By including them, they have ownership of the problem and the solution. What a great opportunity to help them learn this important skill.

2 moms found this helpful

I found that the older my kids got (I have 5 between 12 and 24) the more I needed to be available to them. Like someone else suggested, unless you need the money for food I would work part time or not at all. You only have a season for parenting your kids...they grow up so quickly. Stay home and give them all you have...they're the most important "job" you have right now.

2 moms found this helpful

Hi C.,

I was interested to read your post because my kids grades have dropped also. I am opposite of you, I am not working. I did have a major medical crisis over the past summer. My two boys (13 and 14) had to go live with their Aunt for a little over a month till I was well enough to come home. I had a surgery to remove endometriosis and after they closed me up, my bowel perferated. No one understood why I was so ill and in pain. The 4th day after my surgery for endometriosis my bowel ruptured and I went into septic shock. I had another surgery where I was given a colostomy. I was in the hospital for over a month due to further complications from peritonitis. I was home in time for the boys' school. The first semester of school the kids were a bit on their own as I was too weak to keep on top of them. Their father had to do it even though he works 40 hours a week. Their grades slipped a little, but we thought they would improve the next semester. I am stronger now and able to keep on top of them better, but for some reason they have been doing worse. They are goofing off more, neglecting to turn in assignments even though they do the work and lying about what they are doing. They are in a private school that is part homeschooling, so I am spending loads of time with them and I still have this happening. It is frustrating to say the least. I suppose it could be due to what happened to our family over the summer, but why are they falling apart now that things are more stable?

I guess what I am trying to say is that just because things are bumpy right now does not mean you are doing anything wrong. It sounds to me like you are a great parent. Just hang in there, I am sure the kids will come around. Just keeping saying your prayers and trying to do all you can for them. That is what I am doing.

God bless!
B.

1 mom found this helpful

At this age your older kids really need you around...so at least you know what they are up to and are not getting in trouble. Unless you absolutely have to I would work part time or not at all. The other option is work when your husband is home...

1 mom found this helpful

You're not alone! Make sure there is time to connect each day - dinner together where everyone stays to catch up from the busy day. Consider church activities that have the family together, rather than separate...or weigh them against time as a family. Maybe a family retreat or trip is due. Family nights are not overated - even to teenagers. They might think it's silly to have a "pizza & yatzee" night, but maybe that's what they really want - mom & dad time. Great conversations happen over stranger things.

1 mom found this helpful

Switch to partime!! Just because your kids are older doesn't mean they don't need their mommy (even though they act like they don't). At their age, it's just as important to be around and involved so you can keep tabs and communication open. Left on their own while you work is when they can get into worse trouble than fighting with each other. Since all of this started when you stopped being home for them afterschool, it's pretty apparant where it went wrong.

1 mom found this helpful

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