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School Readiness Β· UK Parents

5 Ways to Ease School Anxiety in Young Children

Gentle, practical strategies to help your child feel calm, safe, and ready β€” before September arrives.

✏️ Written by a mum & teacher πŸ“– 6 min read πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ UK Reception year

Your child has their school place. The uniform is ordered. And somewhere in the middle of all that excitement, you’ve noticed it β€” a little wobble. A few too many questions about what school will be like. Maybe some tears at bedtime.

School anxiety in children starting Reception is one of the most common concerns I hear from parents β€” and one of the most natural. I’d be more surprised if a four or five-year-old didn’t feel some nervousness about starting somewhere completely new, with people they’ve never met, doing things they’ve never done before.

As both a mum and a primary school teacher, I’ve sat on both sides of this. I’ve watched children go through the gates on their first morning looking terrified β€” and by the end of that same week, skip in without a backward glance. The anxiety is real, but it is almost always temporary. And there is a lot you can do between now and September to help.

What you’ll find in this post

  • 5 practical ways to ease school anxiety before it starts
  • How to talk to your child about their worries without making them worse
  • What teachers wish parents knew about the first few weeks
  • When to seek extra support β€” and when to trust the process

First: understand where the anxiety is coming from

Almost all school anxiety in young children comes from one place: the unknown. Children are being asked to walk into an entirely unfamiliar world β€” new adults, new routines, new children, new rules β€” without any real picture of what to expect. That uncertainty is what makes it feel scary.

It’s also worth knowing that anxiety doesn’t always look like crying. Watch for these signs in the weeks before school starts:

🀒Tummy aches or headaches with no obvious cause
😴Trouble sleeping or waking in the night
πŸ₯ΊMore clingy or tearful than usual
😢Going very quiet when school is mentioned
🍽️Changes in appetite
😀More emotional or defiant behaviour

The 5 Strategies

How to help your child feel ready

These aren’t quick fixes β€” they’re small, consistent steps that build confidence over time.

1

Strategy one

Make the unknown, known

The single most effective thing you can do is replace uncertainty with familiarity. Visit the school before September if you can β€” walk around the outside, find the gate they’ll go in, look at the playground. Many schools now publish virtual tours on their website; watch them together. The more your child can picture where they’re going, the less frightening it feels.

πŸ’‘ Walk or drive the route to school during the summer β€” ideally at the time you’d normally leave. This also helps you both get a realistic feel for the morning journey before the pressure of a real school day.
  • Visit the school grounds and point out key landmarks: the gate, the entrance, the playground
  • Watch the school’s virtual tour or any welcome videos from their teacher together
  • Talk through what a typical school day might look like, step by step

2

Strategy two

Talk about feelings β€” without overdoing it

It’s tempting to either avoid the subject entirely (“it’ll be fine, don’t worry!”) or bring it up so often that you inadvertently signal there’s something to worry about. The goal is to create natural, low-pressure opportunities for your child to share how they’re feeling β€” and to validate what they say without amplifying it.

πŸ’‘ Try asking open questions during a walk or in the car β€” not at bedtime when worries tend to spiral. “What are you most excited about?” is a better opener than “Are you nervous about school?”
  • Acknowledge worries without dismissing them: “It makes sense that feels a bit scary. It’s something brand new.”
  • Share a time you felt nervous about something new β€” and what helped
  • Avoid the phrase “don’t worry” β€” it doesn’t work, and it can make children feel unheard
  • Remind them that the adults at school are there to help them with exactly this

3

Strategy three

Read books about starting school together

Stories are one of the most powerful tools we have for helping children process big emotions β€” because they do it at a safe distance. A character in a book feels nervous about school, finds their way through it, and everything works out. That narrative plants a seed: this is something that can be navigated. It also opens the door for natural conversation without it feeling like a formal “chat about school”.

πŸ’‘ After reading, try asking “How do you think [character] was feeling on that page?” rather than “How do you feel about school?” It’s much easier for children to talk through a character’s emotions than their own.
  • The Invisible String by Patrice Karst β€” for children who struggle with separation
  • Starting School by Janet and Allan Ahlberg β€” a warm, gentle classic
  • Funnybones Go to School β€” brilliant for making school feel fun and unthreatening
  • Visit your local library β€” the children’s librarian will have brilliant recommendations
  • Check out our children’s read aloud YouTube channel for a variety of books

4

Strategy four

Practise the morning routine before September

Chaotic mornings make anxious children more anxious. When everything feels rushed and stressful at drop-off, it’s much harder for children to separate calmly. Starting a school-style morning routine a few weeks before term begins β€” getting up at the same time, getting dressed, having breakfast at a consistent pace β€” takes the shock out of those first few mornings in September.

πŸ’‘ Your calm at drop-off is everything. Children read our emotional state with extraordinary accuracy. A quick, warm, confident goodbye β€” “Have a brilliant day, I’ll be right here at home time” β€” is far more settling than a long, lingering farewell that signals to them that you’re worried too.
  • Shift bedtime and wake-up time gradually in the weeks before school starts
  • Prepare as much as possible the night before: bag packed, uniform laid out
  • Create a simple morning checklist your child can follow β€” it builds independence and reduces nagging
  • Practise a goodbye ritual: a special handshake, a hug, a phrase β€” something consistent they can rely on

5

Strategy five

Give them a small piece of home to take with them

A comfort object β€” a tiny keyring on their school bag, a small family photo tucked into a pocket, a special pebble from home β€” can provide real emotional security for young children navigating a big new environment. It works as a physical reminder that home and family are still there, even when they can’t see them. Many Reception teachers quietly encourage this in the first few weeks.

πŸ’‘ Always check the school’s policy first β€” but most are very understanding, especially in those early weeks. Keep it small and discreet so it doesn’t become a distraction or cause upset if it gets lost.
  • A small photo of your family inside their bag or lunchbox lid works beautifully
  • A keyring on their school bag gives them something to hold during transitions
  • You can also create a “connection ritual” β€” something like “I’ll be thinking about you at lunch” gives them a moment to anchor to during the day

It’s okay if the first few mornings are hard. That’s not failure β€” it’s normal.

Even with all the preparation in the world, some children cry at the gate. Some cling. Some go in absolutely fine and save the tears for home time. All of it is normal, and none of it means you’ve done something wrong.

The children who walk in on day one and never look back? They were anxious too β€” they just showed it differently. What matters most is that they feel loved, safe, and trusted to cope.

They are braver than they feel. And so are you.

Common questions about school anxiety in young children

Completely normal β€” and very common. Most children feel some level of nervousness before starting school, and many parents do too. Anxiety about the unknown is a natural response. With the right support, it usually settles quickly once children are in the routine and start to feel at home.


School anxiety doesn’t always look like obvious upset. Signs to watch for include:

β†’ Tummy aches or headaches with no physical cause
β†’ Trouble sleeping or waking during the night
β†’ Becoming more clingy or tearful than usual
β†’ Going quiet or withdrawn when school is mentioned
β†’ Changes in appetite
β†’ More emotional or defiant behaviour

Every child shows anxiety differently. Trust your instincts β€” you know your child best.

Keep conversations light, open, and low-pressure. Ask open questions β€” “What are you most looking forward to?” β€” rather than leading ones like “Are you nervous?” Try to have these chats during a walk or car journey rather than at bedtime, when worries tend to feel bigger.

Acknowledge their feelings without dismissing them or over-reassuring. “It makes sense that feels a bit big β€” it’s something brand new” is more helpful than “Don’t worry, you’ll be fine!”

Yes β€” for many children, a small, discreet comfort item provides genuine emotional security in a new environment. A family photo inside their lunchbox, a keyring on their bag, or a small keepsake in their pocket can all work well. Always check with the school first, but most Reception teachers are very understanding about this, particularly in the early weeks.

Some anxiety before starting school is completely expected. If your child’s anxiety is severe, persistent over a longer period, or significantly affecting their sleep, eating, or day-to-day wellbeing, it’s worth speaking to your GP or health visitor for support.

Most children settle within the first few weeks once they’re in the routine and have formed friendships. If things aren’t improving after a month or so, speak to the class teacher β€” they see hundreds of children go through this and will have helpful insight.