Anonymous wrote:The biter needs to be by the teacher side, non stop, for a couple of weeks. He needs to be her shadow. This is to avoid any future biting incidents. If he continues to bite, after two weeks of shadowing the teacher, then he needs to leave the program. But the teachers need to do their part for a couple of weeks first.
Anonymous wrote:Yes it is developmentally appropriate. Geesh, way to many perfect parents here. There's more, but you can Google too.
https://kidshealth.org/en/parents/stop-biting.html
https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/on-parenting/what-to-do-with-a-preschooler-who-wont-stop-biting/2018/01/09/b1d2a578-f0b5-11e7-b3bf-ab90a706e175_story.html
https://www.webmd.com/parenting/stop-children-from-biting
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nytimes.com/2020/04/15/parenting/toddler/preschool-biting.amp.html
https://www.askdrsears.com/topics/parenting/discipline-behavior/bothersome-behaviors/biting-and-hitting-16-ways-stop-it/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The child is a known repeat biter, the child that is biting should be in arms reach of the preschool teacher at all times. This is a supervision issue at this point. Do they have a policy on biting? Are the willing to bring in someone to work on the issue?
I remember when my oldest (now 21) was in preschool, the facility used a leash system for biters. Those who were repeat offenders got placed on the leash and kept within reach of a teacher.
I think that must have worked because I don't recall any kids being ousted for biting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this a daycare, OP? Is your child there all day (8+ hours)?
Preschool with aftercare program, so I’m not sure if there’s really a difference. DD is there 6 hours, but would be more if DH and I didn’t stagger our work schedules. We need the childcare.
Anonymous wrote:My toddler is going in daycare and has been bitten a couple of times. It seems like a major overreaction to kick a kid out of daycare for this. The daycare should help teach the kid to not bite, not send them to another place where the kid bite new kids. This problem is dealt with like many others: read books about the issue, talk about it a lot (we bite food, not friends), identify and limit triggers, and have an appropriate consequence. That’s what daycares do for…. everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The child is a known repeat biter, the child that is biting should be in arms reach of the preschool teacher at all times. This is a supervision issue at this point. Do they have a policy on biting? Are the willing to bring in someone to work on the issue?
I remember when my oldest (now 21) was in preschool, the facility used a leash system for biters. Those who were repeat offenders got placed on the leash and kept within reach of a teacher.
I think that must have worked because I don't recall any kids being ousted for biting.
Anonymous wrote:Is this a daycare, OP? Is your child there all day (8+ hours)?
Anonymous wrote:Masks would help!
Anonymous wrote:The child is a known repeat biter, the child that is biting should be in arms reach of the preschool teacher at all times. This is a supervision issue at this point. Do they have a policy on biting? Are the willing to bring in someone to work on the issue?