Ways to Ask Your Kids 'So How Was School
Today'?
QUESTIONS
This year, Simon is in fourth grade and Grace is in first
grade, and I find myself asking them every day after school, "So how was school
today?"
And every day I get an answer like "fine" or "good," which
doesn't tell me a whole lot.
AND I WANT TO KNOW A WHOLE
LOT!!!!
Or at least get a full sentence. So the other night, I sat
down and made a list of more engaging questions to ask about school. They aren't
perfect, but I do at least get complete sentences, and some have led to some
interesting conversations... and hilarious answers... and some insights into how
my kids think and feel about school.
1. What was the best thing that happened at school today?
(What was the worst thing that happened at school today?)
2. Tell me something that made you laugh
today.
3. If you could choose, who would you like to sit by in class?
(Who would you NOT want to sit by in class? Why?)
4. Where is the coolest place at the school?
5. Tell me a weird word that you heard today. (Or something
weird that someone said.)
6. If I called your teacher tonight, what would she tell me
about you?
7. How did you help somebody today?
8. How did somebody help you today?
9. Tell me one thing that you learned today.
10. When were you the happiest today?
11. When were you bored today?
12. If an alien spaceship came to your class and beamed
someone up, who would you want them to take?
13. Who would you like to play with at recess that you've
never played with before?
14. Tell me something good that happened
today.
15. What word did your teacher say most
today?
16. What do you think you should do/learn more of at
school?
17. What do you think you should do/learn less of at
school?
18. Who in your class do you think you could be nicer
to?
19. Where do you play the most at recess?
20. Who is the funniest person in your class? Why is he/she so
funny?
21. What was your favorite part of lunch?
22. If you got to be the teacher tomorrow, what would you
do?
23. Is there anyone in your class who needs a
time-out?
24. If you could switch seats with anyone in the class, who
would you trade with? Why?
25. Tell me about three different times you used your pencil
today at school.
So far, my favorite answers have come from questions 12, 15
and 21. Questions like the "alien" one give kids a non-threatening way to say
who they would rather not have in their class, and open the door for you to have
a discussion to ask why, potentially uncovering issues you didn't know about
before.
And the answers we get are sometimes really surprising. When I
asked question 3, I discovered that one of my children didn't want to sit by a
best friend in class anymore -- not out of a desire to be mean or bully, but in
the hope they'd get the chance to work with other people.
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