Anonymous wrote:OP here. Gosh, I wish I had posted before, but we already agreed to the meeting (just the adults, not the kids).
What's the harm in meeting? I'm not sure why so many are adamantly against it; maybe that's my naivete because we've never been in this situation before.
It's a public school and it's the school's idea to have the meeting. The school seems to agree that our child is being bullied. At least, in the correspondence we've had back and forth, at least twice a teacher has said that they didn't see the incident my child was complaining of, but have no doubt it's true due to previous bullying. This particular person has had conflict with several other kids.
So we've already agreed to this, anything we should look out for? I'm not worried about our being bullied or blamed; we are able to stand up for ourselves as needed.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Gosh, I wish I had posted before, but we already agreed to the meeting (just the adults, not the kids).
What's the harm in meeting? I'm not sure why so many are adamantly against it; maybe that's my naivete because we've never been in this situation before.
It's a public school and it's the school's idea to have the meeting. The school seems to agree that our child is being bullied. At least, in the correspondence we've had back and forth, at least twice a teacher has said that they didn't see the incident my child was complaining of, but have no doubt it's true due to previous bullying. This particular person has had conflict with several other kids.
So we've already agreed to this, anything we should look out for? I'm not worried about our being bullied or blamed; we are able to stand up for ourselves as needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would probably go just because I’d be curious as to what they have to say, but that’s just me. I’d also keep my own mouth shut and not saying anything more than some sort of non-committal generalities.
You’re curiosity needs to be left out. That is ridiculous and not the goal.
DP, but I have no clue what you mean here. I too would likely go because I was curious—nothing ridiculous about that—and also because there is a chance it could be constructive. The goal is having a bullying-free remainder of the school year, and the additional information that might come up at the meeting could be helpful in achieving that goal. Since OP and her kid won’t be part of the school community next year, I see little potential for harm.
Leaving is all the more reason why OP doesn’t need to meet. You are naive and foolish. This is not appropriate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would probably go just because I’d be curious as to what they have to say, but that’s just me. I’d also keep my own mouth shut and not saying anything more than some sort of non-committal generalities.
You’re curiosity needs to be left out. That is ridiculous and not the goal.
DP, but I have no clue what you mean here. I too would likely go because I was curious—nothing ridiculous about that—and also because there is a chance it could be constructive. The goal is having a bullying-free remainder of the school year, and the additional information that might come up at the meeting could be helpful in achieving that goal. Since OP and her kid won’t be part of the school community next year, I see little potential for harm.
Anonymous wrote:We had this happen. Went to the meeting this time of year and the other parents told us their child wouldn't be coming back to the school in the fall! They didn't know we'd given up on the school and had committed to attend elsewhere in the fall. Of course the school probably thought it had done wonders by counseling this family out after three years of bullying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would probably go just because I’d be curious as to what they have to say, but that’s just me. I’d also keep my own mouth shut and not saying anything more than some sort of non-committal generalities.
You’re curiosity needs to be left out. That is ridiculous and not the goal.
Anonymous wrote:They want to blame, convolute and bully you under the guise of being proactive