69传媒

Student Well-Being

What Principals Can Do to Get 69传媒 Excited to Learn After Winter Break

By Olina Banerji 鈥 January 09, 2025 | Corrected: January 10, 2025 5 min read
Fairmount Elementary School principal Trey Arrington high-fives student Willow Belcher as she walks into the school for the first full day of the 2023-2024 academic year on Aug. 8, 2023, in Bristol, Tenn.
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Corrected: This article has been updated to correct the location of the Early College School. It is at Delaware State University.

Principal Tracie Anderson Swilley gets first-day jitters right after winter break, just like her students and teachers. She knows that the school鈥檚 climate, right at the beginning of a new year, depends on her mood.

鈥淚鈥檓 going to be the first voice they hear on the [morning] announcement. I make sure the energy is up, that music is playing,鈥 said Swilley, who leads Fairfield Central High School in Winnsboro, S.C. 鈥淚 greet the kids with excitement when they come in, because if you want them to get excited, you have to be excited.鈥

There are personal preparations to be made, too鈥攎eals planned and packed, and clothes ironed for the week. 鈥淓very January, we have to make the decision to eat better,鈥 she laughed.

Principals across the country welcomed back their students this week from their winter breaks. The start of a new semester and a new year, though, can be sluggish. Some students might be anxious or worried to come back to school after an extended break. 69传媒 might struggle to get back into a routine, or be faced with academic gaps they need to make up.

School leaders must keep all these barriers in mind when they plan their back-to-school activities.

When coming back from break, it鈥檚 important to reinvigorate the bonds between students and their teachers, said Chase Christensen, the superintendent of the Sheridan County School district in Wyoming. Building confidence first is key.

To do that, Christensen, who is also the principal of the 80-student K-12 Arvada-Clearmont school in the district, plans to offer self-defense classes every two weeks. These self-defense classes will be paired with a Toastmasters International workshop, where students will gain important communication skills they need to be competitive in the job market.

鈥淲e held off telling students about these [classes] before they came back from break. It built a little bit of anticipation,鈥 Christensen said.

Principals need to set the right tone

Some principals put their schools鈥 social media accounts to work to help welcome students back. Suzan Harris, the principal of Henderson Middle School in Jackson, Ga., filmed herself going around an empty school before the break ended.

鈥淚 did a Facebook video where I鈥檓 in the building dancing and playing in gym by myself. And then I wrote a letter to my parents that said, it鈥檚 boring here without the students. They need to send them back,鈥 Harris said. The post garnered over 2,000 views.

鈥淚鈥檓 the thermostat of the school,鈥 Harris added, 鈥渁nd people are really picking up on the energy in the video.鈥

See also

Photo of principal greeting student at school bus.
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But beyond the welcome hugs, the pump-up music, and the video messages, principals also have serious mandates they want to lay down.

Swilley, for instance, had to enforce a new, statewide on the use of 鈥減ersonal electronic devices鈥 during school hours starting Jan. 1. The new policy restricts students鈥 use of cellphones, headphones, and smartwatches, as well as other personal devices that can connect to the internet.

Swilley said her school already had a policy in place restricting the use of cellphones in classrooms. The new, broader policy, though, had made both students and parents anxious鈥攖here were widespread discussions on social media about how schools would implement this plan.

Swilley knew she had to defuse the tension before the new term started in earnest.

In the first morning assembly for the year, Swilley stressed that the ban only added an extra 55 minutes to the time that students couldn鈥檛 access their phones.

鈥淚 had braced myself for a mass revolt. But I think taking the time to talk to them, preparing them, worked,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd when they thought about it, they were like, it鈥檚 really not a big deal.鈥

69传媒 are still getting used to not wearing their headphones, Swilley said. She鈥檚 given them a grace period to adjust: The first few infractions for headphone-toting students in the hallways or at lunch will be forgiven, before more serious consequences, like parent conferences or in-school suspension, come into play.

The morning assembly is part of a larger plan that Swilley, teachers, and student leaders put into motion back in September. To keep students engaged during lunch or other breaks in the school day, the student leaders have brought games like Connect 4 and life-size checkers into the cafeteria.

The students have also planned activities like a karaoke session, bingo, and friendly competitions to keep themselves occupied in the wake of 鈥渘o TikToks,鈥 said Swilley.

Principals want students to take stock of their performance in the new year

Swilley, who was named the National Principal of the Year by the National Association of Secondary School Principals, asked all her students to set personal or academic goals for the year.

Some students, on track to graduate high school this year, resolved to complete a certain number of college applications. Others aimed to have fewer disciplinary incidents, while some have set their sights on the honor roll.

For Swilley, it鈥檚 not about whether the students meet these goals, but more about setting a standard of achievement for themselves.

Evelyn Edney, the principal of Early College School, a public charter high school at Delaware State University, created a back-to-school workshop for her students that helps them take stock of their performance in school. 鈥淐heck Yourself Before You Wreck Yourself,鈥 named after Ice Cube鈥檚 1992 hit, helps students 鈥渓ook into a mirror鈥 by going through their transcripts and reports on what their behavior was like in previous terms.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like a credit record. They look at where they faltered and why. If they did well in a subject, [the workshop] helps them figure out why they shined,鈥 Edney said. 鈥淒id they love the material? Or do they just love to learn? They talk about all this in groups in their class.鈥

Each grade in her high school goes through this exercise, Edney said, as it helps them make plans for how to improve their performance in the new semester. Some students, in past workshops, have successfully identified fixes鈥攎aking up a missed assignment, or getting a tutor for a subject they鈥檙e struggling with, for example.

Harris, from Georgia, has also set an ambitious target for her middle schoolers in 2025.

鈥淚 want students to take ownership of their own performance this year,鈥 Harris said. 鈥69传媒 need to know how they鈥檙e performing, so we are putting their data into their hands.鈥

The idea is that through two student conferences, planned for the end of the month, students will talk to their parents about their performance, and the areas they need to fix. If there鈥檚 a learning target a student missed last semester, they are expected to plan with their parents to overcome that barrier. 69传媒 can look at their data to compare their performance across semesters.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 get mad at students if you don鈥檛 reinforce what you want them to do,鈥 said Edney. 鈥淚t鈥檚 our fault if we don鈥檛 lay down the expectation of them owning their own learning.鈥

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