This post is "reaching!" |
| I am honestly, scared for the future. My DS X girlfriend was suspended for fighting this girl because he was talking to her... ( I am not sure what happened.) but it somewhat crazy what's going on in schools now.. |
That post is just plain ignorant! |
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The calls we received were from 3 separate teachers over 1.5 years. They all had the same theme- messing around, not paying attention, ignoring directions, talking, distracted. He is also not failing, he is a B/C student and got a D in chemistry. I don't think the situation is as dire as some PP's interpreted it to be.
We have since installed an app that allows us to lock down his phone and monitor everything. I agree with everyone about possible ADHD or depression. |
| I am baffled by the parents who think the teacher should come up with an idea to redirect their child. This is lazy-a$$ parenting. In an earlier post, I recommended you spend a few days in school with your child. If they act like a 3 year old, treat them that way. |
+10000 i am reading all of these responses and cannot believe how many parents are being so soft. I would be livid to receive one phone call let alone three. No phone, no ear buds. I have a 10th 9th and 6th and they beg for ear buds. I say no exactly for this reason. They only want them because so many kids have them in their ears trying to be cute. No sir, not today! |
AMEN!!!! Parents, stop using highly unlikely scenarios as a reason your kid should have a phone. So dumb!!! |
If he is in public school with those grades he is essentially failing....WAKE UP! |
+10000 |
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Give him a flip phone only for emergencies. Problem solved.
And read advice from Jonathan Haidt: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/23/business/jonathan-haidt-smartphones-coddling.html |
| Take the phone away, what is the issue here? |
If he has a VPN installed already, that means he know how to work any apps that allows you to "locK and monitor everything" on the phone. VPNs pretty much bypass that. Believe me I learned that while trying to "supervise" our teens activity online. Also, if I had 3 calls from 3 different teachers I would not only take away the phone completely but I would be calling the school and requesting a meeting with the counselor and my kid. Unless your kid has had a history of not following directions and being disruptive, do not confuse plain bad behavior with ADHD or depression. |
Do they even have meeting? I wanted to have a meeting with all my teachers kid at the end of the semester, and they asked me for the reason. Since my DC had all A and Bs, and no behavior issues, they told me they didn't have time for a meeting... |
+1. Is this public or private school? If it’s public and the teacher is calling you whatever they are telling you about his behavior is probably a thousand times worse. Not to mention that his behavior is disruptive to other students who actually want to learn. I have a teen and tween and they both have phones. I’ve never had an issue with behavior. In fact, I have had teachers reach out to me tell me that they enjoy having my kids in their classes. The difference? My kids would have lost all phone privileges for a month after the first phone call. They know very well that if their grades drop or if they cause any kind of disruption in the classroom the phones are gone. I use parental controls consistently. I monitor screen time consistently. I review grades consistently. I review homework consistently. Do your job and parent. |
| I have the same problem with my son. The phone is too tempting for most adults let alone teens. We ended up taking away the phone for long periods of time and that helped. But unfortunately there is not a really great solution. The truth is that some kids are just not mature enough handle highschool and technology. He got into a good college with a good scholarship but it was a major pain to deal with the tech issues - it put a major strain on my relationship with him and my wife. One tip I wish I had followed is that the parents really need to make the ultimate decisions regarding classes. We let my son choose his classes and he always chose the hardest APs . This was a terrible mistake for him it made the end of every quarter a mad dash to get him to turn in all of his assignments. You know your kids better than anyone else including themselves- if he can’t handle it it’s got to go. Good luck. |