Psyched2Parent: Turning Brain Science into Tiny Wins for Parents

School Meetings Without Tears: The STICKY Note Method


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School Meetings Without Tears: The STICKY Note Method (6 Minutes in the Parking Lot)

If you've ever sat in the school parking lot with your seatbelt still on, staring at the building, feeling your chest tighten while your brain loops "Did I fail my kid?"—this episode is for you. In this episode, Dr. Amy Patenaude gives you a six-minute prep you can do right there in the car so you walk into a school meeting clearer, calmer, and able to ask for what your child needs… without bringing your dissertation and without leaving thinking, "Wait—why didn't I say the thing??" It's called the STICKY Note Method: six steps, one sticky note, a plan you can measure (not "let's wait and see" vibes).

In this episode you'll learn
  • Why school meetings can make you teary, shaky, angry, blank, or weirdly chatty (and why that makes total sense)
  • The brain science in plain language: when it's high-stakes, your thinking brain goes quieter—so your words disappear
  • Three "School Psych in Your Back Pocket" truths that change the meeting fast: data is information (not a verdict), patterns matter, and a plan without measurement is just hope
  • A simple five-part plan to leave with every time: what support, who owns it, when it starts, what data you'll track, and when you'll meet again
  • The School Translator Minute: what "Let's wait and see" and "We'll monitor" actually mean—and exactly what to say next
  • How to share "home data" (after-school crash, homework spirals, bedtime/Sunday scaries) without overexplaining
  • Parent scripts for when your brain goes blank, the meeting gets vague, or you feel yourself starting to ramble
  • A strengths-first opener that shifts the energy in 20 seconds (whole child, not just the problem)
  • The STICKY Note Method: a six-minute parking lot prep that keeps you grounded and gets you to a concrete next step
  • The 5-line follow-up email that locks in clarity after the meeting (without writing a novel)
Tiny Wins to try this week
  • Put a sticky note pad in your car today. Future-you deserves it.
  • Before you walk in, write your Target sentence: "Today ends with a support plan + a date we'll review it."
  • Use one translator line in the meeting: "I can do time, as long as we're clear about what we're trying and how we'll measure it."
  • Close the meeting by summarizing out loud: what, who, when, data, and check-in date.
  • Send the 5-line follow-up email within 24 hours so everyone leaves with the same plan.

Pick one. One is enough.

Free resources
  • Boredom Buster Guide
  • Big Feeling Decoder
  • 50 AI Prompts for Tired Parents
  • School Psych in Your Back Pocket: The School Testing Toolkit (K–12)
Disclaimer

This podcast is for informational and educational purposes only and is not medical, psychological, or legal advice. Listening to this podcast does not create a provider-client relationship. If you're concerned about your child's mental health, safety, or development, please consult a qualified professional in your area.

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Psyched2Parent: Turning Brain Science into Tiny Wins for ParentsBy Dr. Amy Patenaude, Ed.D., NCSP