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RESILIENCE
IN A TIME
OF WAR
Tips for
Parents
and Teachers
of Elementary
School
Children
Events are uncertain for children.
Their friends’ parents, or perhaps their
own parents, may be called away to
serve in the military. They look to
teachers as well as to parents to make
them feel safe in a time of war.
As children start to study subjects that teach
them about the world outside of their home,
they will need your help to sort it all out. You
may wonder how you can teach your child to
move beyond the fears that a time of war
brings. The good news is that, just as your
child learns reading and writing, he or she can
learn the skills of resilience—the ability to adapt
well in the face of adversity, trauma, tragedy,
threats, or even significant sources of stress.
What are some tips that can help you teach
your children resilience? As you use these
tips, keep in mind that each child’s journey
along the road to resilience will be different
and that your own knowledge of your child
will guide you.
10 Tips for Parents and
Teachers of Elementary
School Children
in a Time of War
1. Talk with your child.
When children have
questions, answer them honestly but simply
and with reassurance. Ask them what they
think is happening, and listen to their answers.
Don’t discount their feelings—they may say
they’re afraid, and you should be ready to tell
them that fear is all right, but that they must
go on with life anyway. Use black-and-white
language that leaves no room for doubt, such
as, “I will always take care of you.”
2. Make your home a safe place
emotionally for your child.
Spend lots of
family time with your child, especially during
a time of war. Spend more time with your
child playing games, reading, or just holding
your child close.
3. Limit the amount of news your child
watches during a time of war.
Turn off the TV
or radio when war coverage is on. You don’t
need to hide what’s happening in the world from
your children, but neither do you have to expose
them to constant stories about war. Put away
magazines and newspapers that have extensive
photo coverage of war or frightening covers.
4. Monitor your child’s Internet usage to ensure
that she isn’t going to sites that will give gory or
sensationalized accounts of war.
Realize that the stresses of war may
heighten daily stresses. Your child might
normally be able to handle a failed test or
teasing, but be understanding that he may
respond with anger or bad behavior to stress
that normally wouldn’t rattle him. Reassure
him that you just expect him to do his best.
5. During a time of war, map out
a routine and stick to it.
Children are reassured
by regular schedules. If homework is
completed at a certain time, make sure you
keep that time for homework. Your child may
be less able to handle change at home when
the world situation is unstable.
6. Make sure you take care of yourself.
If you don’t, you may have less patience and
less creativity at a time when your child needs
both to reassure her about her own safety.
Take care of yourself so that you can take
care of your child. Many people find that
turning to a higher power, whether through
organized religion or privately, can help.
7. Tell children that they will be all right.
Reassure them that they will be protected.
Have an emergency plan for the family and
share whatever parts of it you think your child
can understand. Share with children the
emergency plans their schools have and
prepare them—some schools shut down in an
emergency with the children inside, and your
child needs to know he will be protected at
school even if he is not with his parents. If your
children have family in the military, help them
to understand that this is their family member’s
job, just like their job is to go to school.
8. Watch your child for signs of fear and
anxiety he or she may not be able to put
into words.
Has your child become extra
clingy, needing more hugs and kisses than
usual? Have your child’s grades suddenly
dropped? He may be feeling the pressure of
what is going on in the world around him.
Encourage him to write stories or draw
pictures that show how he feels if he can’t
put his feelings into words.
9. Enlist your child’s help. Just because
your child is young does not mean she cannot
do age-appropriate chores, such as
setting the table or cleaning her room.
Make
sure your child knows how her actions
contribute to the entire family’s well-being. If
your child knows that she has a role to play,
and that she can help, she will feel more in
control and more confident.
10. Put things into a positive perspective
for your child.
Neither you nor your child may
have been through a war before, but you should
tell your child that wars end. Point out times
when your child has faced up to and conquered
something that may have frightened him,
whether it was fear of the dark or of entering a
new classroom for the first time. When you talk
about bad times, make sure you talk about the
good times in the future as well.
You can teach your children resilience. But
just because your children learn resilience
doesn’t mean they won’t have bad times. Bad
times hurt, and your children will have times
when they aren’t happy. Resilience is a
journey, and each child will take his or her
own time along the way, just as each child
learns to read and write in his or her own time.
Your child may benefit from some of these
resilience strategies, while other children may
benefit from other strategies. The skills of
resilience you teach your child in a time of war
will be useful to him or her even after war, and
they are good skills to have in daily life.
You may feel that you need some help in
teaching your child resilience. If you are
feeling stuck or overwhelmed and unable to
use the tips listed above, you may want to
consider talking to someone who can help,
such as a psychologist or other mental health
professional. Turning to someone for guidance
may help you help your child strengthen his or
her resilience and persevere in a time of war.
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