Everyone hopes exams will go well and their children will get the results they need but if they don’t, do you have a Plan B ready? Having a back-up in place, with second and third-choice schools, ‘insurance’ university offers, alternative courses, etc can ease exam stress for parents and children. Putting all your hopes on one outcome places everyone under pressure and the strain it creates could be counter-productive.
How parents can manage exam stress: supporting different ways of learning
One of the things that makes the exam period stressful is the frustration, bafflement and irritation of seeing someone studying and revising in ways that just don’t make sense to you. Instead of taking the “Why aren’t you doing this or that” line, try having a conversation about what your young person finds helpful about their particular choices.
10 ways parents can manage exam stress
Here are the top 10 responses that students gave when asked to tell their parents what to do and what not to do through the revision period. 1: Do provide constant supplies of food, and access to baths and long showers 2: Do help me if I ask for it 3: Do let me do it my way 4: Let me have a social life 5: Don’t try to learn with me 6: Don’t keep asking if I need help 7: Don’t moan or nag 8: Don’t compare me to others 9: Don’t keep making sure I’m revising, or spy on me 10: Don’t tell me not to worry
How parents can manage exam stress
Changing the way you think will help your child Tense, anxious, bad-tempered and irrational describe not just the kids taking exams, but their parents as well. The exam period puts strain on everyone: students, parents, families and friends. On the whole, their pets don’t suffer, and that gives us a clue. Pets, as we know, (some of them, at any rate) love you unconditionally, or at least their lasting affection is dependent on the simplest of conditions, mainly food-based. You can probably see where this is going.
How to stop multitasking and become a unitasker
Making this change is more significant than just altering the way that you work or the way that you deal with and respond to demands for your attention. It is more than a mechanical switch. Deciding to adopt a different attitude to ‘tasks’ can transform your life in many ways. Not only will you gain time, you will also benefit from improved health, less stress, better relationships. Throw in more enjoyment and satisfaction and well, why wouldn’t you go for it?
Why multitasking is bad for you
Look at me! Aren’t I clever! I am so on the ball, so quick and responsive, so on my mental toes that I can do loads of things at the same time, and am not in the least fazed when I’m in the middle of a task and have to switch to doing something else. It’s just multitasking. It’s what you have to do if you want to keep up in today’s fast-paced society.
Email Etiquette: love, kisses and emoticons
When you are having a conversation, you communicate not just with words, but with the tone of your voice, the speed at which you talk, your facial expressions, your posture and gestures. On the whole you can tell when someone is being serious and when they are joking.