Advice for New Parents of Adolescents: What Twenty-Two Years of Middle School Has Taught Me
“He used to be such a nice little boy!” That lament voiced by a
student’s mother at a Back to School Night presentation has stuck in my
mind for years. I can even remember the student’s name although he must
be almost 30 years old by now. As a middle school teacher with 22
years of teaching experience, I have heard a variation of that parental
cry many times.
With no children of my own, I have always hesitated to offer advice to the my students’ parents, but when my own beloved niece turned twelve, my brother and sister-in-law turned to me for help. That is when I realized that as a veteran teacher who has spent over two decades in a classroom with thousands of twelve and thirteen-year-olds, maybe I can offer some advice to mothers facing an adolescent child for the first time. And as a writer who struggles to balance writing with my very stressful job, I can sympathize with mother-writers who have an even harder balancing act.
To read the rest of my post, go to Mother Writer Mentor: Practical advice for writing moms
With no children of my own, I have always hesitated to offer advice to the my students’ parents, but when my own beloved niece turned twelve, my brother and sister-in-law turned to me for help. That is when I realized that as a veteran teacher who has spent over two decades in a classroom with thousands of twelve and thirteen-year-olds, maybe I can offer some advice to mothers facing an adolescent child for the first time. And as a writer who struggles to balance writing with my very stressful job, I can sympathize with mother-writers who have an even harder balancing act.
To read the rest of my post, go to Mother Writer Mentor: Practical advice for writing moms