Skip to main content
Finance Management

Schools Are Closed! Now What? A Parentโ€™s Guide to Surviving (and Thriving) the Holiday Chaos ๐Ÿ˜…

By November 11, 2025No Comments

Itโ€™s that time of the year again, exam season! The candidates are busy sharpening pencils, praying over KCPE and KCSE papers, and the rest of the school population… well, theyโ€™re home. For two whole months.

And for many parents, this is when the real exam begins, The patience exam ๐Ÿ˜‚ weeuuhh!!

Because letโ€™s be honest, for the next few weeks, your once-quiet house will sound like a mini playground. Youโ€™ll hear; โ€œMum, naskia njaa,โ€ every 30 minutes, โ€œDad, nimeboeka,โ€ on repeat. And suddenly, your Wi-Fi bill starts looking like rent.

So, what now? How can parents ensure these long holidays arenโ€™t just about snacks, screen time, and chaos? How do you make sure your kids donโ€™t come out of the holidays fluent in TikTok dance moves only?

Letโ€™s explore some practical ways to make this break meaningful, for both you and the little humans running your house.

1๏ธโƒฃ Turn Curiosity into Creativity

Children are naturally curious. Instead of saying โ€œacha kuchezea vituโ€, guide that curiosity.
Encourage them to try simple home science experiments, learn how to bake, or create fun DIY crafts using recycled materials. YouTube is full of great tutorials, and the best part? Itโ€™s educational (well, mostly ๐Ÿ˜…).

Before you know it, your child might be the next young inventor or at least learn to bake decent mandazis without burning the kitchen down lol.

2๏ธโƒฃ Teach Them Financial Skills (the Zenka Way ๐Ÿ’ฐ)

This break is a golden opportunity to teach your children about money โ€” saving, spending wisely, and understanding value.
Give them small allowances and guide them to budget. You can even make it fun by creating a โ€œhome economy.โ€ For example:

  • Do chores = earn some coins

  • Save for something they want

  • Learn that not everything is instant loan from Mum or Dad ๐Ÿ˜…

Teaching money habits early could be the best life lesson they carry forward โ€” and hey, who knows, you could be raising a future financial gurus!

3๏ธโƒฃ Bring Back Outdoor Fun ๐ŸŒณ

Remember how we used to play blada, kati, brikicho, rounders, and shake until sunset? Kids today are missing that joy.
So, unplug the gadgets for a bit and reintroduce some good old outdoor play. It builds teamwork, creativity, and real-life social skills.

And bonus: It helps them burn off all that energy before bedtime, meaning you might finally get some peace and quiet by 9 PM. ๐Ÿ˜Œ

4๏ธโƒฃ Family Projects = Family Bonding

Pick a project to do together. It could be planting a small kitchen garden, redecorating their room, or volunteering at a childrenโ€™s home.
These little activities teach responsibility, empathy, and teamwork, all lessons that donโ€™t fit in a school timetable but shape character for life.

5๏ธโƒฃ Let Them Rest (and You Too ๐Ÿ˜ด)

Letโ€™s not forget, school can be tough. These breaks also serve as time for kids to reset mentally and emotionally.
So yes, let them sleep in once in a while, binge on cartoons, and just breathe. Balance is everything.

And for parents, take a breather too. Youโ€™ve earned it! (Youโ€™re basically a 24-hour chef, referee, therapist, and Wi-Fi provider all in one package ๐Ÿ˜ญ). Pumua jameni.

Final Thoughts ๐Ÿ’ญ

Kenyan parents, this break doesnโ€™t have to be a nightmare. With a bit of creativity, humour, and planning, these two months can become a time of growth, not chaos.
Letโ€™s raise a generation that knows how to think, create, and make the most out of every season, school or not.

After all, learning doesnโ€™t stop when the school bell goes silent, it just moves home.
And who knows? You might even enjoy the process. ๐Ÿ˜‰

I hope you find this helpful.

Until next time, cheers!!

Leave a Reply