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Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)
Reply to "Violence in Kindergarten- Sligo Creek Elementary "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]It's not sped it kids coming from violent homes. There are plenty of parents out there who beat their kids[/quote] It is more kids coming from super permissive homes where there is no discipline just screens whenever the student demands it, no structure, and the kid who is often smart and strong willed soon realizes he or she can do whatever they want and the parent won't intervene. So the parent walks on eggshells or gives in to all the kid's demands because they don't want to see the kid tantrum. So the kid comes to school and realizes no one can touch them or do anything to them. The teacher tells the parent the student is misbehaving and there are NO consequences at home. There are also no rewards that are effective because the student gets whatever they want at home. [/quote] Teacher here. This is more likely the case. I have a student who is nearly as tall as I am and she's 6 yrs old. The only way her mom can get her to school (according to her mom) is to let her walk with her (the student's) phone. When mom gets her to the front door, she walks inside with her until she lines up with her class and then her mom tries to quickly pull the phone away and hightail it out of there. Needless to say, it's like WW3 every morning. My colleague and I end up blocking the door with our bodies to prevent her from running out the door after her mom. We've had meetings about this (and her other awful behaviors) but the real problem is mom's inability to say no. This child has tantrums like a 2 yr old multiple times per day. They last for at least 15 minutes and the entire class comes to a halt because she is screaming the entire time. This child doesn't have special needs. Her mother just doesn't want to parent so all of us get to deal with that. There are 3-4 of these kids in every grade.[/quote] Somehow I doubt you've done a neuropsych assessment.[/quote] It's in the works. Everything moves slowly in public school.[/quote] Then how can you say the child doesn't have special needs? Also, schools don't do neuropsych assessments. What they do is much more limited.[/quote] Her parents are having one outside of school. Her mom said the issues started when she would throw tantrums at age 1 or 2. Her dad worked nights and slept all day so mom would give in to the tantrums to keep her quiet so he could sleep. Years later, she’s still throwing tantrums. Instead of being removed from the classroom, I have to evacuate the classroom to the hallway. Needless to say, not much teaching is going on there. [/quote]
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