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How to Help a Child Feel Confident About Their Hijab at a New School 

Parenting Perspective 

Equip Her With Practical Strategies 

When a child feels misunderstood at school because of her faith or appearance, it can affect both her confidence and her sense of safety. Your role as a parent is to help her see that her identity is not a burden but a source of strength, while also equipping her with practical strategies to navigate her environment. 

Click below to discover meaningful books that nurture strong values in your child and support you on your parenting journey

Listen Closely to Her Concerns 

Start by listening closely to her concerns without minimising them. Acknowledge that it is difficult when others do not understand her choices and let her know that her feelings are valid. This reassurance creates an emotional foundation of safety at home, which she will carry into school. 

Practise Simple Explanations 

Together, practise simple, age-appropriate explanations she can use if asked about her hijab. For example, she might say, ‘It is part of my faith, and it helps me feel close to Allah.’ Giving her short, confident phrases allows her to respond without feeling put on the spot or embarrassed. 

Communicate With Her Teachers 

It may also be helpful to communicate with her teachers, offering them basic information about hijab and Islamic practice in a respectful way. This builds an environment of awareness without making your daughter feel like she must always explain herself. Involve her in the process by asking how much she would like shared, so she feels she has agency in protecting her identity. 

Remind Her She Is More Than How Others Perceive Her 

Most importantly, remind her that she is more than how others perceive her. Encourage her to engage in activities she enjoys and to form friendships around shared interests, so her confidence grows from multiple sources, not only from managing questions about her faith. 

Spiritual Insight 

Her Identity Is a Trust From Allah 

Faith-based challenges at school can be moments where a child learns to see her identity as a trust from Allah rather than a weakness. 

Invite With Wisdom and Good Instruction 

Allah Almighty states in the noble Quran at Surah Al Nahal (16), Verse 125: 

Invite (people) to (follow) the (prescribed) pathways of your Sustainer with wisdom, and polite enlightened direction, and only argue with them in the politest manner...’  

This Verse highlights that explaining our faith to others should be done with calmness, wisdom, and dignity. Helping your daughter prepare gentle, respectful words to describe her hijab aligns with this teaching and gives her confidence that she is practising her Deen beautifully. 

Strength Is Standing Firm With Composure 

It is recorded in Sunan Ibn Majah, Book 1, Hadith 79, that the holy Prophet Muhammad ﷺ said: 

‘The strong believer is better and more beloved to Allah than the weak believer, while there is good in both.’ 

Strength includes standing firm in faith with composure and respect, even when misunderstood. By guiding your daughter with both emotional support and Islamic grounding, you help her transform discomfort into resilience. 

With your reassurance at home and her growing confidence in school, she will come to see her hijab not as something that isolates her, but as a source of honour that connects her to Allah. 

Click below to discover meaningful books that nurture strong values in your child and support you on your parenting journey

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