Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Maybe I know your son, or at least one like him. The boy I know is avoided by nearly everyone because he pushes and kicks other children for no reason. He purposefully hit my 18 month old DD in the nose at pick up time, just as he was passing by. My son in the same class wants absolutely nothing to do with him, and we all wonder why his parents are not dealing better with the situation before someone gets permanently injured and lawsuits fly.
So my advice to you, OP, is to tell your pediatrician, and ask what kind of evaluation is necessary. At the same time, you can get the school to act on your behalf by requesting a behavioral assessment.
Please take this seriously, because I can assure you that your child's peers are suffering more than you are. You're not the one being hit.
So unbelievably self-centered.
Anonymous wrote:
Maybe I know your son, or at least one like him. The boy I know is avoided by nearly everyone because he pushes and kicks other children for no reason. He purposefully hit my 18 month old DD in the nose at pick up time, just as he was passing by. My son in the same class wants absolutely nothing to do with him, and we all wonder why his parents are not dealing better with the situation before someone gets permanently injured and lawsuits fly.
So my advice to you, OP, is to tell your pediatrician, and ask what kind of evaluation is necessary. At the same time, you can get the school to act on your behalf by requesting a behavioral assessment.
Please take this seriously, because I can assure you that your child's peers are suffering more than you are. You're not the one being hit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:mAnonymous wrote:Yes we are treating him for anxiety. But he is still bad. He gets in trouble ALL.THE.TIME. The teacher or principal calls me at least every week. He hasn't lit the school on fire or anything (yet), but he pushes, kicks, etc. These are supposedly his friends, too. He doesn't actually hurt anyone, but the school is always upset. We have him in therapy, supposedly he is getting better, but these incidents still happen over and over. And he's generally ok at home. There seems to be nothing we can do. We talk to him, we are working on stuff our therapist gave us to do with him. He knows he's on thin ice at school, and yet he keeps doing stupid stuff. I'm so mad. And the teacher keeps calling me and I don't know what to tell her. He's in 3rd grade. We are considering changing schools but would rather make it through this year, because the change would also cause anxiety.
F@king unacceptable!!! Your 8-9 year old shoukd NOT be kicking, pushing, eating other students.
Calm yourself. Get aHOLD of yourself. OP knows this. And is clearly working on trying to address it. You are instructed to refrain from participating in this thread anymore if you cannot behave well.
Anonymous wrote:mAnonymous wrote:Yes we are treating him for anxiety. But he is still bad. He gets in trouble ALL.THE.TIME. The teacher or principal calls me at least every week. He hasn't lit the school on fire or anything (yet), but he pushes, kicks, etc. These are supposedly his friends, too. He doesn't actually hurt anyone, but the school is always upset. We have him in therapy, supposedly he is getting better, but these incidents still happen over and over. And he's generally ok at home. There seems to be nothing we can do. We talk to him, we are working on stuff our therapist gave us to do with him. He knows he's on thin ice at school, and yet he keeps doing stupid stuff. I'm so mad. And the teacher keeps calling me and I don't know what to tell her. He's in 3rd grade. We are considering changing schools but would rather make it through this year, because the change would also cause anxiety.
F@king unacceptable!!! Your 8-9 year old shoukd NOT be kicking, pushing, eating other students.
Anonymous wrote:mAnonymous wrote:Yes we are treating him for anxiety. But he is still bad. He gets in trouble ALL.THE.TIME. The teacher or principal calls me at least every week. He hasn't lit the school on fire or anything (yet), but he pushes, kicks, etc. These are supposedly his friends, too. He doesn't actually hurt anyone, but the school is always upset. We have him in therapy, supposedly he is getting better, but these incidents still happen over and over. And he's generally ok at home. There seems to be nothing we can do. We talk to him, we are working on stuff our therapist gave us to do with him. He knows he's on thin ice at school, and yet he keeps doing stupid stuff. I'm so mad. And the teacher keeps calling me and I don't know what to tell her. He's in 3rd grade. We are considering changing schools but would rather make it through this year, because the change would also cause anxiety.
F@king unacceptable!!! Your 8-9 year old shoukd NOT be kicking, pushing, eating other students.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone at your school done a functional behavioral assessment? That's usually part of the process of crafting a behavior plan, and it can be enormously helpful. The idea is to describe the problematic behaviors, figure out what triggers them, and assess what their function is for the student (hence the name). Maybe ask for this as part of a behavior plan?
I am so sorry. Hugs to you.
mAnonymous wrote:Yes we are treating him for anxiety. But he is still bad. He gets in trouble ALL.THE.TIME. The teacher or principal calls me at least every week. He hasn't lit the school on fire or anything (yet), but he pushes, kicks, etc. These are supposedly his friends, too. He doesn't actually hurt anyone, but the school is always upset. We have him in therapy, supposedly he is getting better, but these incidents still happen over and over. And he's generally ok at home. There seems to be nothing we can do. We talk to him, we are working on stuff our therapist gave us to do with him. He knows he's on thin ice at school, and yet he keeps doing stupid stuff. I'm so mad. And the teacher keeps calling me and I don't know what to tell her. He's in 3rd grade. We are considering changing schools but would rather make it through this year, because the change would also cause anxiety.