What do you say?
What if the results are less than you think they’re capable of or hoped for?
What do you say about a B if they mostly get A’s?
What do you say about C’s or lower?
I always get in trouble for what I say and now maybe I think the safest path is to always see the positive though I fall back to raising it if I think they could have done better then I’m told all I do is focus on the negative and ignore all the great results.
What do you say to your kids school results?
As a parent, I honestly do not understand other parents that get caught up on their kids grades. When you do that, what are you teaching them about their self-worth? What if they did their best and their best wasn’t good enough for your arbitrary standards… there’s honestly more to life. A lot more. Education is important, but so is their intrinsic happiness, and the things that bring them joy, and a sense of wellbeing. Not everyone is meant to be academic, and nor would we want everyone to be. There is plenty of opportunity in the world for people to excel in many different areas of life. If you teach your kids that all they should focus on in life is a grade on a piece of paper, you’re going to teach them a narrow view of what matters in life.
Do you think your child’s grades are a reflection of you as a parent? Or is there something you’re trying to prove to the world through your kids?
Your children are not an extension of you.
Now, he lettered in sports, had multiple hobbies and all that good stuff. He now has a Ph.D. and works for the Department of Energy. He is a master of time management.
The big thing is to understand your kids' goals, discuss how realistic their goals are, and how what they're doing is in alignment with their achieving those goals. You can have those discussions as early as middle school. The other thing to realize is your kid will be much better off if you start discussing work/life balance now. Straight A's aren't everything.
The grades were not exactly annoying so much as useless. The teacher was supposed to know the kid and know where their strengths and weaknesses were, address them. Producing a letter grade from a pile of paper was only what, 2 bits? of information about my kid.
Student-teacher conferences could be good. If they remembered my kid at all, and knew anything about how they were doing in their class. If they opened their grade book during the conference, I would close it and get their attention back, say "Tell me about my child's behavior in your class."
Honestly, letter grades are no better than a scarlet letter to hang around the kid's neck.
Seriously though, school grades are not that important. Are they enjoying learning? Are they learning and doing things that interest them? The only time they should worry about grades is if they need them as a prerequisite for uni or tech courses they decide they want to do. Them, not you. By that age they should be independent enough to work that out for themselves.
Granted, I am older and had a great public education that is quite different than what I'm observing today.
"ChatGPT, Joey got a C in his social studies class. This is the paper he wrote and these were the teacher's comments. Mommy's usually bad cop and I'm usually the good one. What should I do?"
That said we do have a 'B' rule where our 2 kids get an ice-cream for B's.
Our daughter is straight A student so we like to take the pressure off on getting a B.
Our son is dyslexic and tends to get C's so he gets an ice-cream for his B/A grades.
Grades are somewhat important to calibrate, but there are many paths to success (I am a high school drop out with no formal credentials). Are they learning? Are they compounding through what they're learning? Do they understand what expectations are, how to meet them, and how to ask for help if they're falling short? To me, this is success. I want my children to be the best they can be, but also try to avoid projecting myself (and all that comes with that) on to them. I love them regardless of how they perform (and I let them know that verbosely). Broadly speaking, I am cultivating development and critical thinking models of little humans, acting as their frontal lobe until theirs takes over.
(my kids are <10, taught by a co-parent with robust resourcing provided, ymmv, i hope this n=1 is helpful; caring is half the battle, and it sounds like you care)
Where do you want to go eat?
As you both understand, because the person they become is a journey, maximize that person! If you get that done and keep their life choices and agency intact, you will have done very good by them.
The most important thing is to discuss appropriate expectations and then set them.
When your child meets those expectations make damn sure it matters.
When your child does not meet expectations reasonably and appropriately set, find out why first and foremost.
Make sure you are helping them where they need it most and you are not getting in the way when they need that in their lives.
From there, wash, rinse and repeat!
Ideally, this is a life long conversation they come to value as you become mentor, friend, helper as they grow to take on the reigns of their lives.
I did it this way and am pretty happy with the outcomes. I wish some things had gone differently, but I can also say I went to the mat helping to prevent it.
My own experiences growing up were why I run it this way, and I get to do it twice due to raising my granddaughter! She is great and I am actually quite happy she is with us. A bit sad we won't have the time we want, but we believe we will get the time we need.
My learning was out of sync with a lot of my primary education. Some things were a real struggle too. The whole thing was colored by poorly set expectations I quickly came to ignore and obviously not meet.
Looking back, the ones I met were because I wanted to. The reasons were interest, could see value or how I might use the material, or threat of negative consequences.
"Worth it" came up a lot.
Memorize all the multiplication tables through 12x12 or fix that old TV I have been poking at? My school actually sent me to the TV shop across the street! Amazingly, I learned a ton. It was something I really needed and benefitted huge from.
The multiplication tables worked out. Really needed them a year or so later and it got done.
Write the essay, or finish that sprite multiplexer? No brainer, write assembly code, do magic? Home computers were amazing and some essay on some tepid topic was torture when I could see something about how to make that computer do something.
Learn to fix my car, or take the bus to school for a while again. No brainer! Fix the car, do some work, get cash for parts!
One parent understood me. The other was painful. I had an uncle and other adults familiar to our family there to help mentor me, tease out the good stuff and make sure I was making good use of all that.