Anonymous wrote:I would spank my child. Seriously. Then tell him if he does it again, he will again get spanked.
I have only spanked each of my children twice in their lives and it was highly effective.
Or maybe take away a favorite toy and throw it in the trash.
Anonymous wrote:If that happened with my kid, their room would be cleared out. Toys boxed up, nice clothes boxed up, everything off walls, nice sheets and blankets boxed. Grounded from iPad tv for a month.
This would not fly at all in my house and my kids know not to even try to go there.
If your son did it again, he obviously didn't understand the message the first time.
Anonymous wrote:I have five kids. None of them are anywhere close to perfect. But they have never been disrespectful towards a teacher and I have never had a complaint about them being mean to other students. To me this would be a huge deal. I think I would be looking at what I had done wrong. Kids learn what they live. At six you are the one influencing your child's behavior. This is 100% on you, OP.
I think you fix it with very serious consequences every time it happens. More importantly, you examine your own behavior. Bully parents have kids who bully.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are trying to get him to stop by using empathy and morality and ethics -- explaining he needs to treat the child as he wishes to be treated; bullying is wrong, etc.
All of those are valuable lessons but your child is just not ready for them. That does not make him a bad child but he is not developmentally ready to consider the other child's feelings in this situation. He sees that the other child does not like him and he wants to hurt him back.
In this situation, stop with the moral lessons and empathy paradigms. Your child gets punished for his misbehavior. He loses a privilege -- screentime; a favorite toy is taken away. He cannot make the cognitive leap you are asking of him.