What to say for the first day of school
A first day of school speech talks to the children first: two to three minutes, simple sentences, one concrete image like the brand-new backpack. It tells the new first graders they can be proud, encourages them about learning, and hands the parents one sentence about letting go. A festive tone is allowed; scaring anyone is not.
It gets delivered in two places. At the school’s welcome assembly, the principal greets the new students in the auditorium or gym before the teachers collect their classes for the very first lesson. Afterward, many families keep celebrating with cake in the yard or the living room; in Germany, where the first day of school is a full family holiday, children even carry a giant decorated cone of treats. There, mom, dad, grandma, or a godparent gives the small, private speech. Both speeches follow the same rules, and the audience sets them: the people listening are six.
The structure: four steps
1. A welcome at eye level. The “welcome” belongs to the children first, then to the adults. One sentence about the situation helps the little ones settle: “You’re sitting right up front today. That’s your spot.”
2. What happens today. The first day of school as an adventure: new class, new teacher, a backpack that still smells like the store. At home, a mini-anecdote replaces this part, like how the child stood in the kitchen fully dressed at six in the morning.
3. One courage sentence. The most important building block. Nobody can read on their first day of school; that is exactly what school is for. Mistakes are part of learning. One sentence is enough, but it has to be in there.
4. The wish at the end. Short and concrete: curiosity, friends, a favorite spot on the playground. Then an action follows: calling up the classes, raising a glass, or finally cutting the cake.
The right length: two to three minutes
250 to 400 spoken words. Six-year-olds listen closely for about three minutes, and on a day this exciting, rather less. Every minute beyond that you pay for with shuffling feet in the front row. For principals at the welcome assembly, the five-minute limit holds, logistics already included; the speech itself stays at three. With family it can be even shorter: 90 seconds, one laugh, one toast, done. The mirror test: read out loud and picture your audience with their legs dangling off a gym bench.
Who speaks: the variations
The principal. Opens the ceremony and welcomes students and families on behalf of the school. Good principal speeches explain the job in kid language and end with calling up the classes. Numbers help: how many first graders, how many teachers, which custodian gets the balls off the roof.
The homeroom teacher. Introduces herself to the new students, short and warm: name, one detail to remember her by, excitement about the first lesson. Two minutes is plenty.
Parents at the family celebration. The most personal version. Mom or dad speaks at the party after the ceremony, the new school kid sitting right there, catching every word. One memory, one courage sentence, one wish.
Grandma, grandpa, or godparent. They get to draw the widest arc: their own school days in two sentences, a comparison that makes the kids stare. What a first day of school looked like fifty years ago is a reliable hit.
What matters when you write
The child is your audience. The most common design flaw in these speeches: adults talk over the children’s heads to the parents, about educational journeys and new chapters in life. Flip it. Address the school starters directly, with “you,” and let the adults listen in. They are moved anyway.
Simple language, short sentences. One thought per sentence, words a school kid knows. No child understands “a new chapter of life”; every child understands “starting today, you come here every morning.” The test: would a six-year-old get every sentence? If you hesitate, rebuild it.
One image carries more than three wishes. The backpack, the first letter written by hand, the new pencil case: concrete things stick. Abstract terms like “thirst for knowledge” sail right past everyone starting school today.
One quote at most. A short poem or saying can round off the speech. More than one turns the speech into story time. Sentences you wrote yourself, with the child’s name in them, beat any borrowed wisdom.
The most common mistakes
“Now the real work begins.” The most quoted line about starting school, and the worst. It turns excitement into pressure. Cut it without replacement; the kids should want to come back on day two.
Talking about the children instead of to them. Ten minutes on the school system and parent partnership while 48 first graders stare at the cake. The main characters deserve the main role.
Too much pedagogy. Curriculum, learning goals, the after-school program: all important, all parents’ night material. On the first day of school, what counts is feeling welcome.
Embarrassing anecdotes. The story of the preschool bathroom accident is not funny to a six-year-old in front of the whole family. Tell what makes the child big, never what makes them small.
Too long, too solemn. An excited school-year-number-one kid cannot sit still for twenty minutes. Cut twice, and the length is usually right.
Two complete speeches, one by a mother at the family celebration and one by a principal, are in our first day of school speech examples.
How your speech takes shape with eloqole
You tell eloqole who is speaking, the child’s name, what they can already do, and where the celebration happens: a gym with 48 first graders or a table with eight relatives. From that comes a speech in simple language that your front-row audience actually understands, at exactly the length you set. You swap in details, read it out loud once, and are done before the backpack is packed.
The speeches for the family celebrations before this one are here too: for the baby shower, the christening, and the birthday.