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    Home » Focusing on Grades First in My Kids’ Report Cards Was a Mistake. | Invesloan.com
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    Focusing on Grades First in My Kids’ Report Cards Was a Mistake. | Invesloan.com

    May 28, 2026Updated:May 28, 2026
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    Life taught me a painful truth. The mistakes we make as new parents are often our biggest opportunities to learn and improve, but our children, especially the firstborns, bear the brunt of that learning curve. At least that’s how it is in my family, and I suspect in many others as well.

    During the first few years of my oldest son’s schooling, I used to make report card day a big deal. It took a painful realization to make me adopt a much healthier, highly successful approach instead, one that completely changed our family dynamics for the better.

    Earlier, my focus when opening a report card was entirely academic

    Even though I always believed I was a parent who prioritized character, manners, and behavior, my inexperience blinded me to fixate solely on grades, especially the lower ones, a habit that was hampering my son’s confidence.

    When the grades arrived, I used to pinpoint the few flaws that were noted before celebrating any successes. I would obsess over why he received below-average marks in a few areas. I was focusing on the subjects where he lost points, overlooking the ones where he excelled.


    The author with her three children.

    The author said that she noticed that focusing on academic grades on her oldest child’s report card was creating unnecessary anxiety. Now she’s changed her approach for all of her children. 

    Courtesy of Ariba Mobin.



    Now I see that I was wrong to believe that showing strictness was necessary so my son would know what to work on. In reality, I was ignoring, or worse, undermining his strengths. His anxiety became so strong that before even handing the report card over, he would defensively list the subjects where he scored average before mentioning his high marks.

    The sad truth was that I was transferring my own performance anxiety onto him, making him think that he needed to show and justify his weakness before showing me his achievements.

    Watching my son lose his confidence changed the way I look at report cards

    This pattern continued for a few years until he reached third grade, around the same time my younger son started preschool. Seeing my eldest, a sweet, obedient, and helpful child, lose his confidence broke my heart.

    He was becoming blind to his genuine strengths, like his amazingly natural aptitude for math and general knowledge and his caring attitude toward all.

    A change was necessary

    I realized I had to change. Good character matters more than a perfect scorecard, and as a mother, it was my responsibility to protect my children’s self-esteem. I needed them to understand that behavior and conduct mattered far more than a letter grade, and that focusing on character would naturally give them the tools to thrive in every aspect of life, including academics.

    Thankfully, our children’s school places a wonderful emphasis on character building, featuring a detailed, dedicated section for behavioral and conduct remarks. On the next report card day, my husband and I agreed on a strategy: we would first acknowledge and celebrate those behavioral remarks.

    This new strategy worked well. Both of my sons looked surprised as I ignored the academic result section and read aloud, with visible pride, their teachers’ praise of their conduct. Watching their beaming smiles made my heart swell.

    Once the tension had completely eased, we casually moved to discussing their good grades. Only at the very end did we address the subjects that needed improvement. Because the children were entirely at ease, they were incredibly receptive to the feedback. They were not defensive and actually listened.

    Ever since we made result day less stressful, the results have been remarkable

    Now, as all three of my children go to school and understand our viewpoint, report card day is no longer a scary day of judgment in our home. My children know that mom and dad will celebrate who they are as people before they look at a single grade.

    They regularly bring home certificates for good behavior, and they are so proud to show them off before we even look at the grades, celebrating them just as much as if they had gotten an A in a subject. My oldest is now in seventh grade, and the boy who used to pre-justify his weak grades now hands me his report card without a second thought.

    Academics still matter in our home. The difference is that our children now approach their studies without fear, and that change alone has done more for their grades than any pressure ever did.

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