thats so true boo |
| As a teacher I am very strict with hyperactivity regardless of gender so as a result the word is out and parents with hyper kids don’t want me for a teacher, thank goodness! It does not offend me at all! I tend not to get the sped behavior kids for the same reason - admin doesn’t want to hear about it constantly. In teaching, being successful with tough kids just gets you more tough kids. No thanks. I’m pad the same either way. |
So youre willfully bad at your job, which is to educate children, all children, even those with different temperments. I think we know what the word is and why those who hear it avoid you! You should consider other careers that you may be better at. (My kids have had those teachers who "got paid the same either way" and it shows) |
No thanks. I’ll keep my 6 figure job, summers, snow days and holiday weeks off, and my pension. And I get great classes each year - it’s wonderful. |
Right? "I'm so bad at my job hardly any parents want me as their kid's teacher!" PP only gets the kids whose parents are doing all the leg work outside of the classroom because they know their kids learn nothing all day, but school is mandatory. |
This ^^^ Ms unpopular opinion here… this is why I sent my kids to an old boys school. It’s so much better for everybody involved. |
My students actually learn a lot because we don’t have any room clearing or other behavior issues. Those are all with someone else. In fact I have the sped kids who need a calm, orderly classroom to function. |
True, but as well brought up kids if an adult told them to cool it they would do so. Kids who don’t respond to adults correcting them have permissive parents. |
+1. It’s obvious which kids are used to adults holding boundaries and which are not. |
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What I see in boys in elementary classrooms is what you will see on the news 6 or 8 years from now. Here are some of them taunting Montgomery county police in the middle of Connecticut Ave yesterday: https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/crime/illegal-street-takeover-investigations-maryland-virginia/65-39193a65-559b-4700-824d-7e9a1dde2b03
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I took a bunch of 1st grade girl scouts on an outing recently (with substantial adult backup, the issue was not being wildly outnumbered) and they wound each other up to the point of madness. Screaming, running in circles, cartwheels and roundoffs and wrestling and breaking stuff. And that was before they all got hungry and whiny because of it. Kids in groups always amplify kid behavior. You have to set some hard boundaries around safety and then accept the chaos. There's nothing wrong with boys being loud and wild with their friends, as long as they're not bullying or being unkind. Loud and wild is a sign of fun happening. |
It's really just not that. I'm the other party PP and similar to OP we are saying these boys are actually totally fine in smaller group settings like a playdate. Well behaved overall and definitely listen to No and any rules I as the host parent lay out. We have them over often and do other activities where there parents are there too (whole family stuff). Part of this is how they hype each other up. Not that parenting can't help with that but this isn't about constant everyday misbehavior. (And I do know kids who are frequently a problem, even in school, and this group I was talking about I didn't include those kids.) |
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In my sons friend group there are 2 boys whose inclusion very much changes the behavior, they are just more active and hands on and loud then the others. They are good kids just more active and require a lot more supervision.
What is interesting is my son knows this and picks and chooses when to invite those kids. If they are doing something that he wants that energy, he invites them. He doesn’t invite them for other activities. I don’t think they have been invited for a sleep over or a birthday party because my kid finds them enjoyable in shorter bursts or with specific shared activities. |
Not always. The kid that is most frequently out of control or on the border in our friend group has parents who are working with him and who are trying to get things smoothed out. The kid is on medication and is working with someone because he has a legit diagnosis. But he is a kid and he does have something going on and he cannot control his responses all the time especially when in an excitable situation. He does respond when told no but he is not likely to remember that no 15 minutes later because he has little to no impulse control and struggles with emotional regulation. All of us are aware of that. He is not a bad kid, he just needs more reminders and guidance. It is improving as he ages but he is going to be at a different place than most of his peers well into teenage years. Not gonna lie, we don’t invite him to everything because he can be a bit much and it is overwhelming for my kid as well as us. DS invites him when he thinks it is going to be fun to have the kid there but that isn’t everything. DS doesn’t tell us that but when we see who DS is inviting and to what and we can see the trend. And that is fine. But there are parents who are working with their kids but the kids have more going on and it just takes more. |
Found the #boymom. 🙄 |