What does your school do when your PK3/4 has a poop accident? DCPS *only* (not charter)?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Why do you all even want your untrained child going to school, regardless of whether it is legal or not? Why are you putting children into situations they aren't ready for? No child needs to be in school before they can take care of their own bathroom issues. Y'all need to learn to parent and stop dumping your children.



I know, it's really awful, all these parents who want their kids socialized, learning, and generally participating in society. If only they'd kept their kids home and waited until kindergarten or better yet first grade to enroll them in an educational/social environment we'd all be better off. Good lord, what has parenting come to these days?
Anonymous
Why the vitriol for pottery training? Who are you people?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Why the vitriol for pottery training? Who are you people?

Seriously, I taught my child how to throw on the wheel before she was 2! She's glazing with the best of them now. Y'all are just jealous.
Anonymous
I can't understand you mean moms! What is the matter with you?


OP, I'm sorry your child went through that. It must have been awful for both of you. Our school is the same as others have posted, where teachers won't change a pre-k child.

I hope your son is feeling better.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Why do you all even want your untrained child going to school, regardless of whether it is legal or not? Why are you putting children into situations they aren't ready for? No child needs to be in school before they can take care of their own bathroom issues. Y'all need to learn to parent and stop dumping your children.

Did you miss what OP said? There's a difference between being trained and having an accident.
Anonymous
We are in PK4 wotp. The teacher or aide changed my child a few weeks ago after a poop accident.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm not comfortable with a non-parent adult helping with toileting.


+1 doesn't apply to me anymore as we have moved past the accidents stage (woo hoo 1st grade!) but I allreviated our DCPS having a no change policy. They made it clear at orientation that their policy would be to assist changing without any touching for pee accidents and a call to parents for poop.
Anonymous
Our school nurses will not assist with any poop or pee accidents. They state that it is not in their DOH contract/job description. It is challenging for the teacher to stop teaching to change a child when there is a school nurse present and available who should be able to assist.
Anonymous
I am a DCPS PreK teacher as well and when I was called to change my own child's poop, not only did I go to the school immediately to change him, I took him home because at that point, he needed a bath. I do not know about "the policy," but I do know that DCPS is not a daycare and we as parents must work diligently to potty train our children. Additionally, we (staff) have to be careful when assisting students with potty training to avoid unwarranted accusations.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:DCPS PreK teacher here.

Sh*t happens. A real teacher who cares about her students will change them. As a parent and teacher, I would expect my child's teacher to do the same. I have heard no such policy, it's just not true. The teacher is LAZY and does not care for your child. As the saying goes, Kids don't care how much you know until they know how much you care. Be weary.


I am also a DCPS pre-k teacher.

It is the educational aide job -it literally says so in their job description. It does NOT say that in ours.

Now some aides REFUSE.

Would I change the occasional poop accident personally? Yes. I experienced anxiety throw up as well for the first 4 months…even though I had a horrible gag reflex.


Some teachers really just want to teach-even pre-k.

Am I a little judgmental? Yes because if a parent gave me all the tools I’ll use them.

Now if there’s no change of clothing and it’s continuous -I will send the kid to the nurse. (No kids in my class have no change of clothing, I have bought clothing for children before only to never have them come back as extras).


Anyway bottom line, unless extenuating circumstances the child will be changed by the educational aide (for sure) or if the teacher doesn’t mind.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm not comfortable with a non-parent adult helping with toileting.


Ha. You are actually insane.
What are you going to ask the staff if they have children?

Guess you don’t care about topics that can be sensitive for some because you have a ‘holier than thou’ complex.



Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'm not comfortable with a non-parent adult helping with toileting.


Ha. You are actually insane.
What are you going to ask the staff if they have children?

Guess you don’t care about topics that can be sensitive for some because you have a ‘holier than thou’ complex.





The good news is that person’s child is now over ten years old, like this thread.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:You should have trained him. You can't expect the school to clean his crap. Eww.
I'm an RN and I did not go to University for four years to clean crap.
Get help for his anxiety too.
You anger is misplaced.


The school nurses in DCPS can’t do any actual medical care. They offer badaids, water and call parents for everything else.

Also lots of RNs, PTs, OTs, etc. in hospitals clean up accidents. My sister has a doctorate in PT and talks about cleaning up poop and pee at the time. You seem to lack thr compassion I would assume teachers an nurses should have in this situation.
Anonymous
Whenever a student in my child's DCPS PK3 or PK4 class had a poop accident, the child was changed, and the clothes were washed and dried in the washer and drier that are in one of the PK classrooms.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Our school nurses will not assist with any poop or pee accidents. They state that it is not in their DOH contract/job description. It is challenging for the teacher to stop teaching to change a child when there is a school nurse present and available who should be able to assist.


What can school nurses do? Honest question because all the school nurse at my child’s school seems to do is convince us to pick them up for every little issue.
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