Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Secondary education

Connect with other parents whose children are starting secondary school on this forum.

Help! How will scatty DS cope at secondary school?

52 replies

KitsPoint · 27/04/2025 20:44

Hello, I would really welcome some advice.

DS starts secondary in September. He is a very bright boy who does well at school, NT/no suspected neurodivergence but he can be SO forgetful and scatty I really worry for him starting at secondary and just getting punished all the time for it.

Examples this weekend alone:

  • football Saturday am, asked for the millionth time whether he should wear his footie boots or wear trainers and take boots with him. As per every week since at least January we told him to wear trainers and take boots.
  • forgets to take boots with him. Hubby realises as they arrive at footie and has to drive him back in a rush to collect them (not ideal as hubby is one of the coaches and can’t be late).
  • leaves bag with inhaler in the car a few streets away instead of taking with him to the pitch. Thankfully he rarely needs it but he knows he should have it with him.
  • today, attends a birthday party and leaves his hoodie there.

I know this scatiness isn’t unusual in a pre-teen boy, but obviously secondary is a massive step up with so much more to remember in terms of different sports kit/equipment/books/laptop/instrument etc and of course remembering to take and bring back blazers/jackets etc. And whereas we’ve been able to take eg forgotten football kit to his local primary a 5 min walk away that just won’t be possible at secondary.

We’ve been trying to make him more responsible for remembering his own stuff (we write his clubs etc on the calendar for him to check, telling him we won’t bring forgotten stuff to his primary) it’s only semi-working.

So if you’ve been through similar and have any tips they would be very welcome!

As a PS if people have app recommendations he is not going to have a smartphone but will have a brick phone with a basic calendar/reminder app, and he does have an iPad at home.

Thank you!

OP posts:
verycloakanddaggers · 30/04/2025 15:37

FishfingerFlinger · 29/04/2025 21:03

Alexa isn’t replacing parents 😂- it’s just a simple way to do time-specific reminders. I use Alexa reminders all the time myself. And ideally we want to wean them off being dependent on parents for everything An Alexa reminder is more independent than being nagged by parents.

You're replacing a parental reminder with Alexa. It's not emotionally good for kids. What you call nagging is actually parental engagement.

I use electronic reminders myself, as an adult. That's irrelevant. Kids need the emotional involvement of parents.

TeenToTwenties · 30/04/2025 16:15

verycloakanddaggers · 30/04/2025 15:37

You're replacing a parental reminder with Alexa. It's not emotionally good for kids. What you call nagging is actually parental engagement.

I use electronic reminders myself, as an adult. That's irrelevant. Kids need the emotional involvement of parents.

This is secondary school though.

A teen with executive functioning problems needs to learn strategies for life.
Teaching them how to set reminders on phones/Alexa is making them independent.
It removes the mental load from the parent and the being 'nagged' for the child.

It isn't saying the parents can't ask questions and be engaged as well.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page