How to Help Your Year 6 Child Prepare for Secondary School

Mark Day • 28 May 2026

Simple ways to help your Year 6 child feel confident, organised and secondary ready before starting Year 7 in September.

If your child is in Year 6, September can feel like a big step. Starting secondary school brings excitement. It also brings nerves. There are new teachers, new routines, new subjects and new expectations. For parents, it can be hard to know what will help most. The good news is this: being ready for secondary school is not just about academic ability. It is also about confidence, organisation, routine and independence. Here are some simple ways to help your child feel more prepared for Year 7.


1. Talk positively about secondary school

Children often copy the mood of the adults around them. If the move to secondary school feels calm and positive at home, that helps.Talk about what your child can look forward to.


This might include:

  • new subjects
  • new friends
  • clubs and sports
  • more independence
  • feeling more grown-up


If they feel worried, let them say so. Try not to rush in too quickly. Sometimes children just need to feel heard.


2. Build independence over the summer

Secondary school expects children to be more independent. They need to manage their belongings, follow a timetable and remember what they need.

Summer is a good time to practise these habits.


Encourage your child to:

  • pack their own bag
  • check they have what they need
  • keep their room or desk tidy
  • use an alarm clock
  • follow a simple checklist
  • prepare for the next day


These are small steps, but they can make a big difference in September.


3. Keep key skills fresh

Many parents feel they should do lots of extra work over the summer. Usually, that is not necessary. What matters more is keeping the basics fresh. A little practice in reading, writing and maths can help stop confidence dipping before Year 7.


Try:

  • daily reading
  • times tables practice
  • mental maths games
  • short writing tasks
  • spelling review
  • simple comprehension activities


Keep it short. Keep it regular. Keep it low-pressure.


4. Reintroduce routine before term starts

The move to Year 7 can feel tiring. The days are often longer. The pace feels quicker. Everything is new. A gentle return to routine can help.


In the last couple of weeks of summer, try to:

  • move bedtime earlier
  • set a more regular wake-up time
  • reduce late nights
  • add some quiet reading time
  • encourage getting things ready the night before


This can help the first week of school feel less overwhelming.


5. Help your child get organised

A lot of children worry about forgetting things. They worry about the timetable, homework, equipment and getting to the right place on time. Simple organisation habits can help reduce stress.


Show your child how to:

  • use a planner or checklist
  • keep school letters in one place
  • label their belongings
  • check what they need for the next day
  • lay out uniform and equipment the night before


The more familiar these habits are, the easier Year 7 often feels.


6. Remember the social side matters too

Starting secondary school is not only an academic change. It is a social one too. Some children move up with friends. Others find themselves in new groups.

It helps to remind your child that friendships can take time. They do not need to have everything sorted in the first few days.


Encourage them to:

  • be friendly
  • join in
  • try clubs or activities
  • talk to new people
  • be patient with themselves


Confidence often grows once children realise everyone else is adjusting too.


7. Support the emotional side of the transition

Even confident children can feel unsettled before secondary school. Some worry about getting lost. Some worry about homework. Some worry about fitting in. Keep the conversation open.


Try questions like:

  • What are you looking forward to?
  • What feels a bit unknown?
  • What do you think will help on the first day?
  • Is there anything you want to practise first?


These chats can help your child feel supported and understood.


8. A little extra support can help

Some children benefit from a gentle boost before Year 7 starts. Others need support once the first few weeks begin. That is completely normal.

A little help over the summer holidays, or early in Year 7, can build confidence and reduce anxiety. It can also help children strengthen the core skills they will use most in secondary school. For families looking for Secondary Ready tutoring in Waltham Abbey, Essex, focused support can help children feel more confident in English, maths, organisation and study habits before the move to Year 7.


Final thoughts

Starting secondary school is a big milestone. It is normal for children to feel excited and nervous at the same time. The best preparation is not about pressure. It is about helping your child feel calm, capable and ready. A few simple steps over the summer can make a real difference. If your child would benefit from extra support, Empower Tutoring offers Secondary Ready tutoring in Waltham Abbey, Essex, to help children move from Year 6 into Year 7 with more confidence.




by Mark Day 3 July 2026
For many children, the summer holidays are a well-earned chance to relax after a busy school year. They deserve time to play, explore, spend time with family and simply enjoy being children. But as September approaches, many parents start asking the same question: "Will my child forget everything they've learned?" The good news is that summer doesn't have to be a choice between doing nothing and sitting at the kitchen table completing endless worksheets. With a little planning, you can help your child keep their skills ticking over while still enjoying a fantastic summer break. What is the "Summer Learning Slide"? Teachers often talk about the "summer learning slide" – the small amount of knowledge and confidence that some children lose over the long summer holiday. It's rarely because children suddenly forget everything they've learnt. More often, they simply become a little rusty. Reading becomes less fluent, times tables take a little longer to recall, handwriting loses some consistency, and confidence can dip when routines disappear. For children who have found parts of the year difficult, those gaps can sometimes become a little wider by September. The encouraging news is that preventing this doesn't require hours of extra work each day. Learning Doesn't Have to Look Like School Some of the best learning happens when children don't even realise they're learning. A summer full of conversations, adventures and new experiences can be incredibly valuable. Here are a few easy ways to keep learning alive: Read together for 15–20 minutes most days. It doesn't matter whether it's novels, comics, football magazines or fact books. Bake together and let your child measure ingredients, double recipes and work out timings. Encourage them to write postcards, holiday diaries or even reviews of places they've visited. Play board games that involve counting, strategy or problem-solving. Visit museums, castles, parks or nature reserves and encourage lots of questions. Let children help with shopping by comparing prices, estimating totals and working out change. These everyday experiences build maths, reading, vocabulary and reasoning skills naturally. Confidence is More Important Than Perfection One thing I often remind parents is that confidence plays a huge part in learning. A child who returns to school feeling capable and positive is usually in a much stronger position than a child who has completed dozens of worksheets but feels anxious about making mistakes. Summer is a chance to build that confidence. Without the pressure of homework, tests and deadlines, children often become more willing to ask questions, have a go and tackle areas they've previously found difficult. Why Summer Can Be the Best Time for Tutoring Many people think tutoring is only for exam preparation. In reality, summer is often one of the best times to begin. Children are usually far more relaxed. There are no spelling tests to revise for, no SATs on the horizon and no weekly homework to squeeze around. That means tutoring can focus on something much more valuable: understanding. Rather than rushing through the next topic, we can take our time to revisit areas that have caused problems during the year. Perhaps fractions never quite clicked. Maybe reading comprehension has become a struggle. Or perhaps your child simply lacks confidence when faced with something unfamiliar. Summer gives us the space to work through those challenges at a pace that suits your child. Many parents tell me that their children actually enjoy summer tutoring because it feels completely different from school. Lessons are calm, personalised and focused on helping children experience success. A Small Boost Can Make a Big Difference Tutoring over the summer doesn't need to mean weekly intensive lessons. Even a handful of sessions can help refresh key skills, rebuild confidence and ensure children return to school ready to learn. Instead of spending the first few weeks of September trying to remember what they learned in June, they can begin the new school year feeling prepared and positive. Looking Ahead to September The summer holidays should absolutely be filled with fun, family time and making memories. A little learning along the way simply helps children hold onto the progress they've worked so hard to achieve throughout the year. If your child has found part of this school year challenging, or you'd like them to begin September with greater confidence, summer tutoring can provide that gentle boost in a relaxed, supportive environment. The goal isn't to race ahead. It's to make sure your child starts the new school year believing they can succeed.
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