Williamsburg Family of Schools Blog

How to Help Your Child Process a Tough School Year

Written by Williamsburg Team | Jun 11, 2026 7:18:10 PM

A helpful conversation guide for parents, because the end of the
school year is the right time to actually check in.

 

Most parents want their student to finish the year feeling seen and understood. But between grades, logistics, and summer plans, the real conversation rarely happens. A lot of kids are carrying something they haven't had a chance to say out loud yet. This guide gives you a simple way to ask—and really hear the answer.

 

Before You Start

How you have this conversation matters as much as what you say. A few things to keep in mind before you begin:

Spontaneous, not scheduled

Don't announce it. Don't set a time for it. The best version of this conversation happens when it doesn't feel like a meeting. Let it find its own moment, whether that's dinner, a drive, or a walk. You'll know when it's right.

Side by side, not face to face

A car ride. Making dinner together. A walk around the block. Side-by-side removes the pressure of direct eye contact, and that small shift makes honest conversation easier for both of you.

No notebook, but take mental notes

The moment a phone or pen comes out, the conversation turns into an interview. Stay present. You can write down what you heard after they've gone to bed.

How To Open The Door

Start with an observation, not a direct question. Negotiation experts call these "no-oriented questions." You're giving your child something to react to rather than putting them on the spot. When a teenager feels like they have a little control in a conversation, they talk.

“It seems like this year was rougher than last year; am I wrong?”

This gives your child something to correct rather than something to confess. There's no trap, no pressure, no agenda. Just a signal that you've been paying attention and that you're safe to talk to.

If they push back and say things were fine, ask what made it okay. If they say it was actually harder than you thought, you just learned something important. Either way, you're in the conversation.

Two more openers that work the same way

  • “It seemed like you weren’t always excited to go to school beyond the usual—am I way off?”

  • “It seemed like you were a lot more frustrated about school this year, or am I crazy?”

Keep It Going—Three Questions To Go Deeper

Once they're talking, these three questions help you understand what's really going on. Ask one at a time. Leave real space after each one.

Stick to What and How questions, not Why. Why questions put kids on the defensive. What and How questions keep them thinking out loud.

 

QUESTION 1

“What part of your day at school felt like the biggest waste of time this year?”

Specific enough to get a real answer. Open enough that they can take it wherever they need to.

They might say things like:

A class that went nowhere

Sitting through stuff they already knew

Lunch or hallways feeling lonely

Hours of homework that didn't seem to matter

Feeling rushed all the time

What they might really be saying:

"I'm not being challenged the way I need to be."

"I don't feel like anyone here really sees me."

"I'm capable of more than this environment expects."

QUESTION 2

“Was there a moment this year that felt like things were actually working well at school?”

The answer, or the absence of one, tells you a lot. A student who can't name a single moment where things clicked has been running on empty for a while. If they can name one, ask what made it different.

They might say things like:

A project they actually cared about

A teacher who took them seriously

A day things finally made sense

Something that happened outside of school

Nothing comes to mind

What they might really be saying:

"I want to feel like my effort actually leads somewhere."

"I need someone to notice when I do something well."

"The things I care most about don't happen at school."

QUESTION 3

“How would next year feel different if you had more say in how it went?”

This shifts forward without pressure. It's not asking them to solve the problem, just to imagine something better. What they describe tells you what they actually value.

They might say things like:

More control over their schedule

A teacher who actually knows them

Less time on things that don't matter

More room to go deep on things they love

Feeling less like a number

What they might really be saying:

"I want to feel like my time and opinions matter."

"I want a mentor, not just a teacher."

"I want school to feel like it belongs to me."

After They Share—Acknowledge, Don't Solve

This conversation is a beginning, not a fix. Your job right now is to keep the door open. The phrases below give them room to say more, and give you room to ask more. Resist the urge to reassure too quickly or jump straight to solutions.

“That makes a lot of sense.”

No judgment, no reframe, no silver lining. Just acknowledgment that what they felt was real and worth saying.

“Tell me more about that.”

The simplest way to keep them talking. It signals that you're genuinely curious—not just waiting for your turn.

“I didn’t know you felt that way. I’m really glad you told me.”

Builds trust for the next conversation. Tells them opening up was the right call and that there's more room to share when they're ready.

“Can I think about that and come back to you?”

You don't have to have an answer today. Coming back, and actually doing it, builds more trust than a rushed response ever will.

Action Items

You don't need all the answers right now. But a few intentional steps this summer can make a real difference before the next school year quietly arrives.

 

1. Write down what you heard

Not a formal document, just a few notes. What themes came up? What did they need more of or less of? Writing it down makes it harder to lose when August gets busy.

 

2. Have a second conversation about what great looks like

The first conversation was about what wasn't working. The second one should be about what they'd actually look forward to. Ask: "What would a school year look like where you finished it feeling proud?" Their answer is a blueprint worth keeping.

 

3. Give yourself permission to consider all the options

Most families default to the familiar path, same school, same setup, because change feels hard and the calendar moves fast. But summer is the right window to ask an honest question: is there a better fit out there for this particular kid? You don't have to decide anything yet. Just be willing to look.

 

The fact that you're asking these questions already says something. Most kids just need someone in their corner who noticed. You noticed. That's where good things start.