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I adjusted my off-the-shoulder sweatshirt covered in splatter paint. Inspired by the movie “Flashdance,” my sweatshirt did little to distract from the fact that I was a 5-foot-8-inch-tall 12-year-old standing alone outside a middle school classroom. It was the first day of school, and I knew no one. My family had just relocated to the area from several states away.
As I waited for the door to my classroom to open, I saw two girls whispering nearby.
“Smile,” I thought to myself as my lips curled over my teeth, covered in braces. “Make new friends,” I could hear my mother’s voice coaching me inside my head.
They approached with the kind of confidence reserved for kids who grow up in the same place their whole lives.
“Are you the new teacher?” one of them asked.
“No,” I replied. Then I froze. I knew I was taller than the average 12-year-old, but had I just been mistaken for an adult? “I’m a new student here,” I told them.
And then they walked away.
Being the new kid is a phenomenon that many children will experience in their lives. School districts and government agencies officially refer to it as student mobility, defined as any time a student changes school for reasons other than grade promotion. Student mobility can be voluntary, such as changing schools to participate in a magnet program, or involuntary, as in my case, due to a change in a parent’s job.
But on that uncomfortable first day, I was not thinking about what kind of statistic I was. All I knew was that I was alone, nervous and scared. The experience of being the new kid has encouraged me to teach my own children to look for the new students at their schools and be kind to them. In a culture that is desperate for kindness, reaching out to the new kids is a tangible way to demonstrate it.
The following are 10 concrete ways I’m teaching my kids to help the new kid at school. May you find these helpful to share with your own kids as the school year begins.
1. Recognize that there will be new kids at school, kids who do not know anyone. Look for them, don’t look past them.
2. Say hi. Ask where the new kid is from. Does she have any pets or siblings?
3. Sit with the new kid at lunch. Seriously, just sit with him at lunch on the first day.
4. Invite the new kid to hang out after school.
5. Did I mention you should just talk to the new kid? It’s okay if you’re not best friends. Maybe you won’t have anything in common. But if you never even talk to the new kid, then you won’t find out if you have anything in common.
6. Tell the new kid about clubs, sports or other activities at school. When I was invited to join the basketball team, I gained a whole team of friends.
7. Help the new kid find out where things are, such as the gym and the cafeteria.
8. Sit with her on the bus or stand with him at the pickup loop. Even if it’s just for a day or two.
9. Compliment the new kid. Maybe she has a cool backpack. Maybe she's wearing a shirt with the logo of a sports team that is also your favorite sports team. Remember those girls who walked away from me on my painful first day? Later that day, one of them told me she liked my watchband. It was a small comment, but it meant so much to me.
10. Be welcoming and inclusive when participating in group work in class. Remember, the new kid knows no one, and things may have been run differently at his old school. Parents, teach your kids to look for the new students and take any of these concrete steps to be kind and helpful. As a result, the new kid won’t feel so alone and will be one step closer to finding her way at a new school.
And if you see any new moms or dads standing alone at the pickup loop after school? Then it’s your turn to say hello. Ask where they are from. If you never even talk to the new parents, then you won’t find out if you have anything in common.
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