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Experts Share Tips For Coping With Back To School Anxiety

Ah, the inevitable sign that summer break is coming to an end: back-to-school advertisements. As beneficial as they are for a parent's wallet, they may be triggering anxiety in their children as they prepare to return to school. 

"For children, as it pertains to school, it's normal to feel scared about something that is coming new," said  Miami-based psychologist Lina Acosta Sandaal,  founder of , an organization dedicated to sharing information about child development with parents. 

Children of all ages experience school-related anxiety and fear, said Jill Ehrenreich-May, director of the Child and Adolescent Mood and Anxiety Treatment Program at University of Miami. 

"In younger children, we see more fears regarding separation. As they age, they worry about more realistic fears like getting along with others and whether or not they will be bullied and if they will be able to do all of the work they are required to do and testing," said  Ehrenreich-May.

While adults know that some of the things their children worry about do not actually cause them harm, Sandaal urged parents to resist the urge of telling their kids "there is nothing to worry about."

"That doesn’t resonate with the child because their brain is telling them that they are in danger,” Said Sandaal. "So if you as a parent say that is not happening, they can't trust you because their body is telling them that they are in danger."

Instead, Sandaal said parents should listen with empathy to their child's worries and try to help them come up with a plan to confront that fear. 

In order to help overcome anxiety, a child needs to be exposed to the cause of their worry.

“Slowly expose them to what they are afraid of. Whether it’s school, whether it is going to a party, you can do it slowly and with different layers," said Sandaal. 

If a child's anxiety causes physical symptoms like vomiting and sweating, both psychologists urge the parents to seek professional help. 

Sandaal and Ehrenreich-May recently hosted a  Facebook Live discussion at the University of Miami to share information with parents about how to deal with anxiety in children as they head back to school. You can watch it here: 

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Lina Acosta Sandaal, the founder of Stop Parenting Alone, an organization dedicated to sharing information about child development with parents.
/ Courtesy Stop Parenting Alone
/
Courtesy Stop Parenting Alone
Lina Acosta Sandaal, the founder of Stop Parenting Alone, an organization dedicated to sharing information about child development with parents.

Jill Ehrenreich-May is the director of the Child and Adolescent Mood and Anxiety Treatment program at the University of Miami.
/ Courtesy University of Miami
/
Courtesy University of Miami
Jill Ehrenreich-May is the director of the Child and Adolescent Mood and Anxiety Treatment program at the University of Miami.

Andrea Perdomo is a reporter for WGCU News. She started her career in public radio as an intern for the Miami-based NPR station, WLRN. Andrea graduated from Florida International University, where she was a contributing writer for the student-run newspaper, The Panther Press, and was also a member of the university's Society of Professional Journalists chapter.