Anonymous wrote:ps. teacher here--I really do not agree with the standing at the fence and watching advice. Not unless the teacher knows. Kind of reeks of stalking.
I'm the PP who did that. I live across the street and volunteer at school (plus I'm on the PTA Board). But even if they don't know you from Adam, you bet your bottom dollar I would encourage a parent to do this if their child reports being bullied on the playground - as a parent, sometimes you just have to do what you've got to do, for the sake of your child. Who cares if it looks weird? There is nothing wrong with it - you're not taking photos or touching anyone. Recess volunteers can't be everywhere at once, and my child did not want to report anything to them. I was the only adult witness that day of what a group of boys did to my child.
Anonymous wrote:ps. teacher here--I really do not agree with the standing at the fence and watching advice. Not unless the teacher knows. Kind of reeks of stalking.
OP here. Thanks everyone. I send an email to the teacher, and appreciate the book recommendation. DC (a boy) has friends outside of school, and in school -- but the friendships in the classroom seem not to apply to playground time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmm. Having vivid memories of my own recess, and my son's experiences of recess, I would first visit in person, discreetly, to see of there is any bullying going on. Then I would observe to see whether my child has the necessary social skills to navigate completely open situations like these.
You might also have a kid that needs to learn to ignore mean comments and casual cold shoulders, and be more resilient. You can't have structured play all the time, otherwise these situations would never come up, and children would never learn by them. Even good kids will occasionally say and do mean things and children have to experience them to be able to manage the emotions they create. As long as there is not consistent picking on one kid, it's good for them in the long run. I say this as the mother of a child who was bullied. I had to intervene once, but then it was fine.
How are you supposed to visit in person discreetly?
Anonymous wrote:Hmm. Having vivid memories of my own recess, and my son's experiences of recess, I would first visit in person, discreetly, to see of there is any bullying going on. Then I would observe to see whether my child has the necessary social skills to navigate completely open situations like these.
You might also have a kid that needs to learn to ignore mean comments and casual cold shoulders, and be more resilient. You can't have structured play all the time, otherwise these situations would never come up, and children would never learn by them. Even good kids will occasionally say and do mean things and children have to experience them to be able to manage the emotions they create. As long as there is not consistent picking on one kid, it's good for them in the long run. I say this as the mother of a child who was bullied. I had to intervene once, but then it was fine.
There is something serious going on here. I'd meet with teacher to see what s/he observes, and probably set up some therapy sessions with a child psychologist to talk about what's going on.