I was going to say something similar and then saw your reply. My child has significant anxiety and has been suicidal in the past. He is scheduled to go to Outdoor Ed but it's pretty nerve racking for all of us. It's easy to blame parents but you really can't know everything about other people's kids. And as my kid has told me, he is glad that he has parents who were not against medication because he knows that it has been life saving for him. I imagine that this is something similar. |
Yes, happily guilty of under parenting. My kids will learn perseverance and coping skills, imagine that. |
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Np here: I chaperoned Outdoor Ed last year. They needed parents especially at night for the cabins. My daughter and I both had a lot of fun. I found that a change of scenery (Outdoor Ed) brings the kids together. In a good way. We had a few shy/quiet girls in our cabin and we played some games to get everyone involved. ?
As an MCPS grad I still have fond memories of Outdoor Ed as a 6th grader and later as a counselor as a 12th grader. Back then we went for a whole week up to Emmitsburg. OP: Do what is best for YOUR child. Talk to your child's World Studies tracher for concrete answers about what they would do during the school day. Every MS is different. |
| Yes reviving this very old post. What did last year's parents do if your kid didn't end up going to Outdoor Ed? |
| My kid still went to school. Half the grade went the first half of the week and half the grade went the second half, so there were at least some kids in all of his classes, except for science, since that's how they made the split (kids who had Teacher A went first and Teacher B went second). There are always a handful of kids who don't go, so even in his science class there were a couple of kids there and they watched a movie with a sub. |
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Speaking to the revived post. My kid didn't go. They were not emotionally ready to go so soon into MS and forcing it would have been useless as they are very stubborn.
That said, I didn't push too hard. When I went in 6th grade, a girl was bullied so mercilessly in the cabin that she self-harmed and a lot of other students had to see the aftermath. Then when I went in 8th grade, the adult supervision was sporadic and a bunch of kids got physically injured and had to leave early (including me). Minus those issues, it was ok, but it wasn't a highlight of my time in MCPS. |
6th AND 8th?? Sounds sus. For many kids, 6th grade can be a bit early to attend. |
| I went in 6th AND 8th. Not sus at all. Graduated in ‘91. We used to go in both grades. |
| Don’t send her op it’s no big deal |
| I wouldn't be comfortable sending my kids to outdoor ed. I don't think I would have wanted to go at that age either. I don't get it. |
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Here's more discussion on Outdoor Ed to help you form your decision:
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1098728.page |
It's boring for students who stay at school. It's typically a catch-up time for the students who stay behind and owe a lot of assignments. Having covered, or subbed, for teachers who are at outdoor ed, I can tell you that class time at school is boring and students can be raucous. |
If this is the case, you should be doing more than skipping outdoor ed. |
If your child is being bullied in school, you should not allow that to continue. Put them in a different environment. |
Two of my kids have severe anxiety to the point of threatening suicide and I followed a lot of advice from therapists over the years about only doing controlled exposures, etc. Guess what? It didn't help them get better. I am now in the camp of pushing kids a lot more. So what if the PP's daughter had to come home early? She went and now knows that 1) she was brave enough to try and 2) nothing really terrible happened. Just letting kids imagine how awful it might be is not a reason to stay home. |