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Teaching life skills at home: What schools can’t do alone

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Jan 22, 2026, 22:31 IST
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1/6

There’s this quiet expectation we place on schools

We hand over our kids for six or seven hours a day and hope they come back knowing how to read, do math, get along with others, and somehow be ready for real life. But here’s the thing we don’t always say out loud: schools were never built to do all of that on their own. They just can’t. Not because teachers don’t care, but because the system has limits. And that’s where home comes in.

2/6

Schools teach subjects. Life doesn’t show up on a timetable.

A school day is sliced into neat blocks. Math at nine. Language at ten. Science after lunch. That structure works for academics. But life skills don’t sit quietly in a 40-minute period. They pop up while making breakfast, arguing with a sibling, losing a game, or forgetting homework for the third time this week. Those moments are messy. And they don’t fit into a lesson plan.
Teachers try. Social-emotional learning, group work, classroom rules — it all helps. But when you’ve got 25 or 30 kids with different needs, backgrounds, and personalities, you can only go so deep. A teacher can explain responsibility. A parent can show it every morning when the kid forgets their lunch and has to deal with that discomfort. Different kind of learning.

3/6

At home, kids see how life actually works

Kids are always watching. Not in a creepy way, just in that quiet, soaking-it-all-in way. They notice how adults talk to each other when they’re tired. How money conversations sound. How mistakes are handled. How anger shows up. None of that is in a textbook.
And this is where home has a power schools don’t. A child can watch you struggle, adjust, apologize, and try again. They can see that adults don’t have it all together either. That’s huge. It teaches resilience without using the word resilience at all. It just feels like real life.
But that also means we don’t get to fake it. You can’t lecture a kid about patience and then lose your mind in traffic every day. Well, you can, but they’ll believe what they see, not what you say. That’s uncomfortable. And honest.

4/6

Life skills grow in the boring moments

We tend to think life lessons have to be big talks. Sitting on the edge of the bed. Serious voice. Long explanations. Sometimes that matters. But most skills grow in boring, repeat moments. Cleaning up even when no one’s watching. Waiting your turn to speak. Handling disappointment when plans fall apart.
Schools don’t have access to those moments. Home does. And yeah, it’s slower. You might explain the same thing ten times. You’ll wonder if anything’s sinking in. Then one day your kid solves a problem on their own or owns up to a mistake, and you realize something stuck after all.
So don’t underestimate the power of letting kids struggle a bit. Not rescuing them immediately. Not smoothing every rough edge. That’s not being harsh. That’s teaching them how the world actually responds.

5/6

Why schools still matter, just not alone

This isn’t about blaming schools or saying parents should do everything. Schools are incredible at what they’re designed for. Exposure to ideas. Learning with peers. Seeing other ways of thinking. Structure. Routine. Teachers often become role models kids desperately need.
But schools work best when they’re not expected to replace home. When kids arrive with some basic tools already forming — how to listen, how to cope with frustration, how to try again. And those tools usually start at home, whether intentionally or not.
And honestly, some kids don’t get that support at home. That’s when schools stretch themselves thin trying to fill the gap. Teachers become counselors, mediators, life coaches. It’s too much for one system to carry.

6/6

You don’t have to be perfect to teach life skills

Here’s the relief part. Teaching life skills doesn’t mean being a flawless adult. In fact, perfection gets in the way. Kids learn more from seeing how you handle messing up than from watching you get everything right.
Say you lost your temper. Say you were wrong. Say you don’t know. Those moments teach accountability, humility, and honesty better than any lecture ever could.
So if you’re worried you’re not doing enough, you probably are. If you care about how your child grows into the world, that already counts for something. Life skills aren’t taught in one big lesson. They’re built slowly, imperfectly, at home, in between everything else.
And that’s something schools, no matter how good they are, can’t do alone.

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Copyright © May 27, 2026, 04.08PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service