Script β you giving notice
I need to talk with you about something I've given a lot of thought to. I've decided that our current arrangement isn't working well for either of us, and I'm giving you formal notice as per our contract β [X weeks], which brings us to [end date]. I want to handle this professionally. I'll send you a written letter today confirming the end date, and I'll do everything I can to make the handover as smooth as possible for [child's name].
Script β parent giving notice
Thank you for letting me know. Our contract requires [X weeks'] written notice, so I'll need that confirmed in a message or letter β just so we both have a clear end date. Based on today, that would be [date]. Fees continue as normal during the notice period. I'll send you a written confirmation from my end too.
What not to say
"I need to reassess my numbers / capacity." (when the real reason is something else)
You don't owe a full explanation, but a vague business reason when the real issue is personal creates distrust. Keep it brief and honest rather than elaborate and evasive.
"I'm so sorry, this is terrible timing, I feel awfulβ¦" (more than once)
Acknowledge it once if it genuinely is bad timing. Repeated apologising reopens the negotiation.
"Maybe we can revisit this in a few months."
Don't offer a door you don't intend to open. False hope makes the ending harder.
When they push back
"Can you tell me why? What have we done wrong?"
"This isn't about anything you've done wrong β I've made a professional decision about my setting, and I'm not able to go into more detail than that. I know that's frustrating and I'm sorry I can't say more."
"Can you just give us until the end of term?"
"My notice period is [X weeks] as per our contract, and the end date is [date]. I can't extend beyond that, but I'll do everything I can to help make the transition smooth."