Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 9 yr old DS sometimes will try to talk to me like I'm his friend.. the "not", and eye-rolling. I tell my DS, I am not your friend, so don't talk to me like I am. I would also tell your DS that it's ok for peers to banter and talk that way to teach other (like teacher to teacher peer), but not child to adult.
OP-here. That's pretty much what we've said to him. He's lost privileges a couple of times because he kept pushing the envelope. I was just thinking he was getting this from other kids and expected that, but when I began to suspect that he might be picking it up from the teacher, I got a little more concerned about how we address it.
Anonymous wrote:My 9 yr old DS sometimes will try to talk to me like I'm his friend.. the "not", and eye-rolling. I tell my DS, I am not your friend, so don't talk to me like I am. I would also tell your DS that it's ok for peers to banter and talk that way to teach other (like teacher to teacher peer), but not child to adult.
We've addressed the behavior, and talked about what's appropriate, but after having witnessed some of this between the teachers, I'm wondering if he thinks it's cool because that's what his teacher does. He really looks up to this guy and he's a good teacher and my son is doing well. I don't want to create any waves at school, but I'm perplexed at how to address this with my kid if he sees adults talking this way and everyone thinks it's funny. We don't think disrespect is funny in our house and this kind of behavior is disrespect in my book. but I don't want to denigrate his teacher in my kid's eyes