The SF2 Family Reporting System
FREE WORKBOOK – EPISODE 1 COMPANION
The SF2 Family Reporting System
A weekly check-in workbook for families who stay connected on purpose. The system Esther and Rich actually use in their home – School, Sleep, Family, Friends.
“We didn’t build SF2 because we had extra time. We built it because we kept realizing, weeks after the fact, that one of our kids had been struggling with something and we had missed the window to help early.”
– Esther Jackson-Stowell
This workbook was born from Episode 1 of The Broker’s Table. Rich built the structure. Esther added the questions.
What Is the SF2 Method?
Most families don’t lack love. They lack a structure for checking in. The SF2 system is a 15-to-20-minute weekly conversation covering four areas.
- School. How is learning going? What is hard right now? What is working?
- Sleep. How is sleep quality and duration? Sleep is the first thing to change when something is wrong.
- Family. How are we doing as a unit? Any tension, any appreciation, anything unsaid?
- Friends. Who is in your life right now? How are those relationships going?
How it works:
- One conversation per week, same time, same place if possible.
- The parent leads but does not dominate. You ask; you listen more than you talk.
- No phones at the table.
- No punishing honesty. Your first response to hard news is curiosity, not correction.
- Keep notes. The quarterly review section shows you why.
The One Rule That Made Everything Else Work
During SF2, nobody gets in trouble for what they share. The moment you use the check-in to discipline, children learn not to be honest during it, and you have lost the tool. Address things separately, after you have had time to think. The check-in itself is a listening space, not a courtroom.
Weekly Check-In Template
Print this page and use it each week.
Family: _________________________ Week of: _________________________
Who is present: _________________________
School
What was the best thing that happened this week in school/work? ____________________________________________________________
What was the hardest thing? ____________________________________________________________
Is there anything you are worried about or need help with? ____________________________________________________________
Scale 1-5, how are you feeling about school/work overall?
Child/Person 1: _____ Child/Person 2: _____ Child/Person 3: _____
Sleep
How has sleep been this week?
Child/Person 1: Much better / A little better / About the same / A little worse / Much worse
Child/Person 2: Much better / A little better / About the same / A little worse / Much worse
Any changes to sleep routine, nightmares, or unusual fatigue? ____________________________________________________________
Family
What is one thing you appreciated about our family this week? ____________________________________________________________
Is there anything in our home or family that felt hard or unfair this week? ____________________________________________________________
Is there anything you want us to do more of, or less of, as a family? ____________________________________________________________
Friends
Who did you spend time with this week? ____________________________________________________________
How are those friendships feeling? Any tension, any new people, anyone you are worried about? ____________________________________________________________
Is there anyone you wish you were spending more time with? ____________________________________________________________
Parent notes – things to follow up on: ____________________________________________________________
One thing we are grateful for as a family this week: ____________________________________________________________
Conversation Starter Cards by Age
Ages 3 to 7
- What was the funniest thing that happened today?
- Did anyone make you feel left out today?
- What did you learn at school that you want to teach me?
- Who do you like playing with the most right now?
- What do you wish I knew about your day?
Ages 8 to 11
- What is one thing you’re proud of this week?
- Who are your closest friends right now? What are they like?
- Is there anything happening at school that you haven’t told us yet?
- What worries you most about the next few months?
Ages 12 to 15
- What was something hard this week that you handled well?
- How are you sleeping, and be honest?
- Is social media feeling good or bad this week, and what is actually happening there?
- What do you need from me that I’m not currently giving you?
Ages 16 to 18
- What’s something you’re building or working on right now that you’re genuinely excited about?
- How are you feeling about the future, honestly?
- Is there anything in our family dynamic that you think needs to change?
- What do you wish we talked about more?
Adult Children and Aging Parents
- How are you actually doing – not the version you tell everyone?
- Is there anything you need that you haven’t asked for?
- Is there anything in our relationship that needs to be said?
Quarterly Review Template
Quarter: _______ Year: _______
How many weeks did we complete SF2 this quarter? _____ of 13
School: patterns over the quarter. ____________________________________________________________
Sleep: patterns over the quarter. ____________________________________________________________
Family: patterns over the quarter. ____________________________________________________________
Friends: patterns over the quarter. ____________________________________________________________
Three things we want to do differently next quarter:
1. ____________________________________________________________
2. ____________________________________________________________
3. ____________________________________________________________
One thing we want to keep doing: ____________________________________________________________
You Now Have the System. The Rest Is Showing Up.
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Listen to Episode 1: “Leadership, Love and the Warrior Ethos with Dr. Rich Stowell”
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Educational Content Only: The content in this workbook is for general informational and educational purposes only. It is not personalized financial, investment, legal, or tax advice and should not be relied upon as such. Esther Jackson-Stowell is a licensed real estate broker. Her broker license covers real estate brokerage activity in the states where she is licensed; it does not authorize her to provide personalized securities investment advice. Results discussed are illustrative of specific circumstances and are not typical. Past results do not predict future outcomes. Consult a qualified financial adviser, licensed attorney, or CPA before making any financial decision.
