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Agreements for You and Your Ex About Education

By Len Stauffenger

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Republish: EasyPublish
Published: 15Oct2008
Word count: 445
Viewed: 377 time(s)
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Getting a good education is critically important for your child. What they learn is not nearly as important as the process they go through while learning. In the process, they learn discipline, mental maturity, that improving feels good, that there is always more to learn, that interactions with others has to be done harmoniously. Learning helps your child mature. I'm confident that you can think of lots of other things your child will learn while he's learning. And, the things that he learns does play a role in the work that he will eventually do.

Here are some questions to consider when examining how you and your ex want to support your child as he enters school and progresses through it's levels.

1. Do any of your children have special needs at school?

2. How can each of you support those needs so our child can succeed at school?

3. Has the child's teacher brought up anything about your child and his school performance?

4. If this change is creating a downslide, how can the two of you address it?

5. What behavior does your child have when there's a problem at school?

6. Does each parent recognize this behavior?

7. Can you discuss it with the other parent and decide how you will solve it?

8. Is your child as willing to do his school work at both parents' homes? It's not fair to the child to make only one parent the "good guy" or the "bad guy." Both should share this responsibility.

9. Have you noticed your child's school performance changed since the divorce?

10. have you discussed this with his other parent to seek a common solution?

11. Do your ex and you both agree on the school goals and performance standards for our child/children?

12. Have you told your children that you are both in agreement?

13. Do both of you hold your children to the same standards for school performance? Remember, continuity is something children crave.

14. Can you meet your child's other parent at school conferences easily? If not, what can you do to improve this for the sake of your child?

Education plays a crucial role in your child's life, his development, his success, his good feelings about himself. You can make his school years wonderful or unpleasant. Being on the same page with his other parent will go a long way toward helping him succeed. With the above questions answered, you can now proceed to creating ways to use those answers as a strong foundation and make education appear like fun and a rewarding challenge to your child.

Len Stauffenger's parents taught him life's simple wisdom. As a divorced dad, he wanted to share that simple wisdom with his girls. "Getting Over It: Wisdom for Divorced Parents," his book, is the solution. Len is an author, a Success Coach and an Attorney. You can purchase Len's book and it's accompanying workbook at http://www.wisdomfordivorcedparents.com

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