How was school today?
Fine.
WHEN DID IT CHANGE

When did we start
slowly losing the ability to understand our children?

They still talk to you every day. But so many changes are hidden in the most ordinary answers.

WE USED TO KNOW

When they were little,
we understood them so well.

When they cried, we knew if they were hungry, tired, or scared.

When they were small

Emotions written on their face. A hug was all it took to comfort them.

As they grew up

They developed classmates, comparisons, self-esteem, secrets, and their own judgments.

Later, they learned to say many things.
But it became harder for us to know what they really meant.

I don't want to join anymore.May hide: fear of failure
The teacher called on him again today.May hide: comparison and disappointment
They didn't wait for me.May hide: peer relationships
Nothing, I'm just tired.May hide: emotional avoidance
Mom, do you think I'm smart?May hide: self-evaluation

Children never stopped expressing themselves.

Their world has always been hidden in their everyday words.

TIME CONNECTS THE DOTS

One sentence reveals little,
but time tells a story.

April 3

I had a lot of fun with them today.

April 9

They always pick someone else first.

April 15

I don't want to join group activities.

April 22

There's nothing to say about school.

Periodic Observation

Over the past three weeks, your child has shown increased attention to peer evaluations. When it comes to group activities, their willingness to participate has declined compared to before.

MORE THAN EMOTIONS

Not just seeing emotions,
but also seeing their abilities.

Thinking Patterns

Clearer cause-and-effect reasoning when describing events.

Empathy

Beginning to understand why others act a certain way during conflicts.

Sustained Interests

Proactively discussed mechanical structures and building for three consecutive weeks.

Problem Solving

After failure, starting to actively seek alternative approaches.

Children's growth doesn't only show in grades. Many precious abilities are quietly growing in every expression.

THE NEXT RIGHT RESPONSE

What parents truly need
is knowing how to respond next time.

This Week's Growth Observation
Recent State

Your child has been less proactive in talking about classmates lately, but repeatedly asks whether others do better than them.

Compared to Before

Compared to last month, they are more sensitive to others' evaluations and more likely to avoid competitive activities.

Advice for Parents

This week, try asking less about why they don't participate. Instead, share a story about a time you were afraid of failure yourself.

No diagnosisNo labelsNever define a child by a single conversation