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Are the kids all right? Helping the youngest cope during the pandemic

GSE associate professor Jelena Obradovi膰 shares strategies for parents to support young children鈥檚 emotional health.
April 27, 2020

The COVID-19 outbreak has many parents concerned about the long-term emotional impact on their kids, especially those in early childhood. How can adults protect the well-being of their little ones?   

On this episode of School鈥檚 In, Jelena Obradovi膰, an associate professor of education at (GSE), joins GSE Dean Dan Schwartz and Senior Lecturer Denise Pope to talk about young children鈥檚 vulnerability to the disruption and stress of the pandemic, and how parents can support their kids鈥 mental and emotional health during this time.

Obradovi膰, who directs the  (SPARK), shares a set of practices the nonprofit research organization Child Trends calls the 鈥3 Rs鈥: reassurance, routines and regulation.

Reassurance involves staying calm and giving children a sense of safety and security. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really important that we communicate that the adults are doing the best they can to keep [kids] safe and healthy,鈥 Obradovi膰 says. Given that illness and death are realities with the pandemic, parents need to balance honesty with reassurance, she says鈥攊n part by acknowledging that things are upended and conveying what kids can do to help, like wash their hands and practice social distancing.

Routines are also an important way to help kids feel safe by providing a sense of predictability. That doesn鈥檛 mean creating an ambitious daily schedule of specific activities in 30-minute blocks, which can provoke more stress for both kids and their parents. Obradovi膰 suggests breaking the day into general categories like play time, lunch time, nap time, learning time and together time, and putting them into some kind of sequence so that kids know what to expect.

The third R, regulation, refers to helping children manage their emotional responses to stress. Without the vocabulary to express their feelings, young kids especially may become irritable or clingy or lose their temper.

鈥淚 love asking my kids how 鈥榖ig鈥 they feel a certain emotion,鈥 says Obradovi膰. If they鈥檙e mad, she says, 鈥淚鈥檒l ask, 鈥楬ow big is your mad?鈥 So they can show you with their hands, and they feel heard.鈥 To help them regulate the emotion, she鈥檒l ask: 鈥淒o you want me to help you make that feeling smaller?鈥 That way, they feel supported while taking an active role in their own self-regulation.

She also shares tips for helping kids self-regulate through simple mindfulness exercises, such as having them put a finger in front of their nose and inhale like they鈥檙e smelling a flower, then exhale by pretending to blow out a candle. 鈥淎 couple of deep breaths can really calm a kid down鈥攁nd can also calm an adult down.鈥

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Faculty mentioned in this article: Jelena Obradovi膰