Tending to A Hidden Side of the Working Parent Equation

Mom stressed about high schooler's school work

What was the hard part of being a working parent during the pandemic? 

If you answered trying to work while managing small children as they demanded attention during work meetings, you’re right. 

But there was another part, a more under-the-radar one: managing high school students who were in the other room taking care of themselves.

Children in Zoom meetings may have gotten all the attention as the obvious (and very serious) working parent challenge.  But parents of teenagers didn’t get off stress-free. Because here’s what their colleagues—and their employers—didn’t see. 

Frustrated teenagers trying to pay attention in remote chemistry class but distracted by Snapchat. 

Sequestered athletes and scholars watching TikTok videos instead of running track, attending debate tournaments, or leading class council meetings. 

Expectant students – who’d been working their whole lives toward their senior years -- letting hours of expensive standardized test prep go to waste after test dates were postponed and then ultimately cancelled.

These are no small things for students – or their parents. Yet they were largely unnoticed. 

The goal of college has been a dream for many of these families since birth. And all of those dreams began to feel tenuous as month after month set students further and further back from the goal line. Even as the pandemic seemed to ease, admissions only grew more complicated, and dreams only moved further away. Those concerns might not have appeared on screen, but they were just as worrisome – and plenty disruptive to people’s jobs. 

And the coming academic season promises continuing twists and turns. 

  • Many colleges are still test optional, though many are also still encouraging students to submit scores. 
  • At some colleges, applications skyrocketed, causing acceptance rates to plummet, while others are struggling to fill their classes. 
  • Most colleges are planning for in-person instruction in the fall, but last year’s virtual learning led many students to transfer. And economic uncertainty meant many sleepless nights worrying how they will actually pay for it.

Imagine trying to figure it all out while doing your day job. 

Worst of all, parents are doing it alone, trying to support students’ virtual college searches and the rest of the admissions process without the in-person help they’d counted on from school counselors. While 41% of students connected with their school counselors in the second half of 11th grade in 2019, less than half that amount—just 18%—took advantage of that help in 2020

Confusing? Definitely. It’s the reason why searching college advising during the pandemic returns more than 11 million results. And why my team and I have been fielding questions from the media about every aspect of the totally changed college landscape. 

The above is one of the reasons many employers brought in help. But there’s another. Young children have understandably moved center stage as a serious concern. But those whose children no longer need snacks and babysitting – who no longer demand attention when they step into their parents’ Zoom meeting – are begging to be noticed. Employers who marshalled in resources understood that; and in doing so, they did more than address a hidden challenge – they showed these employees that they matter. That’s no small thing when the trend toward reevaluating careers has employees leaving jobs at the rate of 4 million a month. 

And at a time when every employee counts, a little notice for a hidden challenge goes a long way.

Bright Horizons
About the Author
Bright Horizons
Bright Horizons
In 1986, our founders saw that child care was an enormous obstacle for working parents. On-site centers became one way we responded to help employees – and organizations -- work better. Today we offer child care, elder care, and help for education and careers -- tools used by more than 1,000 of the world’s top employers and that power many of the world's best brands
Mom stressed about high schooler's school work

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