Prepared to Lead: Teaching Elementary Students the Power of Being Ready
What Does It Mean to Be Prepared?
Being prepared means thinking ahead, organizing what you need, and being ready to take action when the moment comes. For elementary students, this can look like:
- Bringing materials to class
- Completing assignments on time
- Mentally preparing for transitions or challenges
- Anticipating what comes next
Preparation is more than a skill—it’s a leadership trait. Students who are prepared show responsibility, confidence, and self-management—core components of social-emotional learning (SEL).
Why Students Struggle with Being Prepared
Even capable students often fall short when it comes to preparation. This isn’t laziness—it’s usually a skill gap.
Common Causes:
- Underdeveloped executive functioning skills
- Poor time management
- Lack of routines at home or school
- Overwhelm or anxiety
- Limited modeling of organizational habits
- Difficulty with transitions
Consequences of Not Being Prepared
When students consistently show up unprepared, the impact goes beyond missing homework.
- Increased stress and anxiety
- Lower academic performance
- Missed learning opportunities
- Decreased confidence
- Negative feedback from teachers
- Strained peer relationships (especially in group work)
Left unaddressed, this pattern can shape how students see themselves: “I’m always behind” or “I can’t get it together.”
The Benefits of Being Prepared
Teaching students to be prepared is one of the most powerful ways to build both academic and life success.
Prepared students are more likely to:
- Feel confident and capable
- Participate actively in class
- Handle challenges with resilience
- Demonstrate leadership skills
- Build trust with peers and teachers
- Experience reduced stress
Preparation creates a ripple effect: when students feel ready, they perform better—and when they perform better, they feel more confident.
Practical Strategies to Help Students Be Prepared
You don’t build prepared students by telling them to “be ready.” You build it through explicit teaching, modeling, and repetition.
- Teach “Future Thinking”
Help students think ahead with questions like:
- “What will I need next?”
- “What might happen tomorrow?”
- “How can I get ready now?”
Make this part of daily routines.
- Use Visual Checklists
Create simple, repeatable checklists for:
- Morning routines
- End-of-day packing
- Homework completion
Younger students especially benefit from visual supports.
- Practice Packing and Planning
Turn preparation into a guided activity:
- Model how to pack a backpack
- Do “practice runs” before transitions
Role-play being prepared vs. unprepared.
- Build Routines and Consistency
Preparedness grows in predictable environments.
- Same time, same process each day
- Clear expectations
- Structured transitions
Consistency reduces decision fatigue.
- Normalize Mistakes (and Reflect on Them)
When students are unprepared, avoid shame. Instead ask:
- “What happened?”
- “What could you do differently next time?”
Reflection builds ownership—not avoidance.
- Use Storytelling to Reinforce the Skill
Stories help students see themselves in the learning. Characters who struggle and grow are powerful teaching tools for SEL concepts like preparation.
Picture Books That Teach Being Prepared
Here are counselor-approved read-alouds that naturally introduce the concept:
David Goes to School by David Shannon
- A relatable example of what happens when a student is consistently unprepared
First Day Jitters by Julie Danneberg
- Connects preparation with managing anxiety and new situations
The Most Magnificent Thing by Ashley Spires
- Highlights planning, persistence, and adjusting when things don’t work.
How School Counselors Can Lead the Way
As a counselor, you are in a unique position to teach preparation as a life skill—not just an academic expectation.
- Integrate it into small groups (executive functioning, study skills, SEL)
- Reinforce it during classroom lessons
- Partner with teachers to create consistent language
- Provide families with simple tools to support routines at home
Preparedness is not about perfection—it’s about helping students feel capable and in control of their world. If you want students to become confident leaders, start here: Prepared students don’t just succeed—they step forward.
