By Dorota Mani, CEO & Founder, ALBRICH Academy of Excellence
Starting preschool is a milestone — but for many 3- and 4-year-olds, it’s also the first big separation. Tears at drop-off, clingy mornings, or “I don’t want to go” meltdowns are normal. The good news? With consistent strategies at home and school, anxiety fades fast.
Why Preschool Anxiety Happens
- Separation fear: “Will Mommy come back?”
- New routines: Different nap times, group play, potty rules
- Sensory overload: Loud voices, bright lights, new smells
At School: What Teachers Do (That Really Works)
Strategy
Example
Visual “Goodbye Ritual”
A special high-five + “See you at the rainbow door!” so goodbyes feel predictable
Job of the Day
“Line Leader” or “Snack Helper” → instant belonging
Cozy Corner
Bean bag + photo of family + soft toy = safe retreat
Transition Songs
“Clean-up, clean-up, everybody do your share” → signals what’s next
Peer Buddy System
Pair new child with a confident “big kid” for first week
Real result: 90% of anxious drop-offs resolve in 7–10 days with routine.
At Home: 5 Exercises to Build Confidence
1. “Goodbye Practice” Game (2 min daily)
How: Pretend to leave for 10 seconds → return with a silly dance.
Say: “Mommy always comes back — just like in preschool!”
Goal: Turns separation into play.
2. “School Story” with Photos
Print 3 pictures: classroom, teacher, playground.
Make a mini-book: “First, Rayansh hangs his bag. Then, he plays blocks…”
Read every night → familiarity kills fear.
3. “Worry Monster” Craft
Draw a monster on paper. Child tells it their worry → fold & put in a box.
Say: “Worry Monster eats it so you don’t have to!”
Goal: Externalizes anxiety.
4. Breathing Buddy
Child lies with stuffed animal on belly.
Say: “Make Teddy ride the wave — in… out…” (4 sec each)
Use before bed or in car → calms nervous system.
5. “One Brave Thing” Jar
After school, child drops a pom-pom in a jar for something brave (e.g., “I used the potty”).
10 pom-poms = ice cream reward.
Goal: Focuses on wins, not fears.
Drop-Off Script (Copy-Paste for Parents)
“I love you. You are safe. I’ll be at the rainbow door at 3 PM. Give me one hug, one kiss, one high-five — go!”
(Then walk away confidently — no lingering.)
Red Flags vs. Normal
Normal (1–2 weeks)
Red Flag (after 3 weeks)
Crying at drop-off
Refusing to eat/drink
Clinging to parent
Hitting self or others
“I miss Mommy” talk
Nightmares + regression
→ If red flags persist, let’s chat — we’ll co-create a plan.
Final Thought
Preschool anxiety isn’t a problem to “fix” — it’s a sign of attachment. With predictability, connection, and a little brave practice, your child won’t just survive preschool — they’ll thrive.

Dorota Mani
ALBRICH Academy of Excellence
Top 5 Preschool in Jersey City (Private School Review)
