| If he sends a Random text when his at school? My DS psychology teacher made the whole class do it. |
| He send a I love you text to me |
| No. Because he generally doesn't get in trouble. |
| No. Usually her phone is off while she's at school. Sometimes they're allowed to use their phones if all their work in one class is finished. |
| My kid had to do it too. His teacher had them do it and then discussed the replies they got. |
If the teacher made the whole class do it, why would he be in trouble? Your post makes no sense. |
I think she's asking if you'd worry that you DS was in trouble if you received such a text. Like, she didn't like the assignment, because she got "I love you" (or whatever) during school hours and freaked out. |
| This is so confusing. Your child texts "I love you" to you. You think that means he's in trouble? And pp assumes it means he doesn't like an assignment? Am I still on the Earth? |
WHAT?! You're now making even less sense than before. |
| If I got an 'I love you' text in the middle of the day from one of my kids, with no context and not related to anything, then YES I would be very concerned. I would be so concerned I would call the school and have the child called out from class by an administrator to check and make sure everything is okay. I tend to be on the hyper-vigilant side since I specialize in working with high risk kids but the randomness of such a text would cause even my husband, Mr. Go with the Flow, to worry. He probably would hop in his car and drive to the school to see the kid. I am not being facetious. I think our primary worries would be a hostage situation or a kidnapping or some other extreme event. Either one of us would probably send back a response following our protocol and see what happened then. At the very least it would clue in our kid that I/we thought the worst was occurring and I/we either wanted the safe word or the not-safe word in the next message. Pronto. |
This, I get. I hope op clarifies. |
+1, that would be out of character for all of my kids as well and my response would include a request for the applicable code phrase (our family has a few depending on the situation) so that I would know whether there was cause for serious concern. No reply or an out of context reply would absolutely prompt me to either call/visit the school or have a sibling check in on the texter. |
I've seen that with husbands. People comment on the replies. I'd assume it was a psychology experiment to weigh reactions knowing some parents would reply positively, some would think the kid was about to break bad news, some would think their kid's phone was stolen!
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Yep!!! Sorry for my errors, I was trying to type with my Ipad and failed |
It was for his AP Psych class. |