Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To add flame to the fire DD, who has gotten in trouble at school about five times ever, got accused of stealing food at lunch.
You say that as if it’s a small amount of times?!
Five times over the course of her education. She has been attending school since preschool so in a sevenyear period she has only gotten in trouble about five times.
In first a boy stole the bathroom pass from her so she wrote him a note saying "Give me back my bathroom pass!" which got her in trouble for passing notes. There was the time she got accused of stealing ice cream and she's gotten in trouble twice for talking. And then there was this incident so yeah, I do think five times is a small number of times.
Please note that in the next seven years of her k-12 schooling, there are going to be a dozens of incidents where you daughter tells you something that she describes as her being misunderstood or unfairly punished. This is completely normal and part of developing social skills among her peers. When you go on to believe every word she tells you without hearing the other side of the story and then fret and seethe over it for years afterward, you may be harming her social development in the long run.
Anonymous wrote:I'd be done with that private school now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To add flame to the fire DD, who has gotten in trouble at school about five times ever, got accused of stealing food at lunch.
You say that as if it’s a small amount of times?!
Five times over the course of her education. She has been attending school since preschool so in a sevenyear period she has only gotten in trouble about five times.
In first a boy stole the bathroom pass from her so she wrote him a note saying "Give me back my bathroom pass!" which got her in trouble for passing notes. There was the time she got accused of stealing ice cream and she's gotten in trouble twice for talking. And then there was this incident so yeah, I do think five times is a small number of times.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not saying your dd is lying, but please remember you are only hearing one side of the story. While her friends may have accused her of stealing food, the class probably received a silent lunch for being rowdy and noisy, even though your dd perceives that she was the sole reason for the class punishment.
You seem to be overly involved in the daily drama of children. The ice cream situation was many years ago and you are still upset about it. And you continue to hold on to a 5-year-old's version of events which is probably inaccurate. Please view these sagas from the teacher's point of view so you can understand that there is no specific persecution of your dd even though she sees it that way.
Anonymous wrote:How didn't your daughter steal ice cream from her friend in kindergarten?
Also, would just say that she and her friends need to reassess their games. There is likely some dynamics going on that you're not aware of.
Anonymous wrote:To add flame to the fire DD, who has gotten in trouble at school about five times ever, got accused of stealing food at lunch.
You say that as if it’s a small amount of times?!
Anonymous wrote:Is this a public school? Most local districts don’t allow collective punishment. Also if your daughters side was never heard, tell the principle that you want to see the basis for the discipline and that you plan to appeal
To add flame to the fire DD, who has gotten in trouble at school about five times ever, got accused of stealing food at lunch.