FROM THE VIDEO

Key moments from this School Shorts conversation with principal Lucy Naylor and early-childhood educator Kelly Seabrook:

  • Oral language is the single biggest thing a parent builds at home, and it is free; narrate your day and talk constantly. Watch at 29:49
  • A screen does not replace spoken language; the real loss is the back-and-forth conversation that did not happen. Watch at 22:37
  • Self-management matters as much as academics; let a child carry their own bag and open their own lunch. Watch at 03:56

Common questions from parents

What is the single most important thing I should do to get my child ready for school?

Talk with them, often and across many situations, and read together every day. Spoken language is the foundation that later reading instruction builds on, it costs nothing, and it naturally takes the place of passive screen time.

Should I teach my child to read or write their name before school?

There is no harm in it if your child enjoys it, and recognising their own name helps. Skip the pressure, though. Teachers are the experts in decoding and handwriting; your work before school is to grow a love of stories, language, and talking.

My child seems behind on talking and following instructions. Where should I start?

Start at home with rich everyday conversation and shared books, which lift these skills for most children. A home check is a starting point, not a diagnosis; if you suspect a speech, hearing, or developmental delay, or your child might need formal support, ask for a professional evaluation, since that is the route to those services.

Is screen time that harmful for a young child?

The bigger cost is what a screen replaces. Hours on a screen are hours without the back-and-forth talk that builds vocabulary and the sound awareness reading depends on. Swapping some screen time for talking, cooking together, or play does more than any app.