Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be less concerned with reporting it thanby making sure DS knows that "gay" is not an insult and anyone who thinks it is is mistaken.
Darling, in elementary school, "gay" is very much an insult. It was a taunt, wasn't it?
Anonymous wrote:I'd tell him to respond, "it's not nice to call people gay as an insult. There's nothing wrong with being gay."
Anonymous wrote:Girl: " You're GAY!"
Your son: "Is that supposed to be an insult? Because there's nothing wrong with being gay." [boy exits and ignores girl if she tries to engage further]
Done.
Anonymous wrote:they're in fourth grade. he told few other boys about it and they said he should report it to the counselor, but DS didn't want to coz he's 'not the tattle telling type.'
would you let it go since it's the 'first offense'?
Anonymous wrote:I would be less concerned with reporting it thanby making sure DS knows that "gay" is not an insult and anyone who thinks it is is mistaken.
Anonymous wrote:I would be less concerned with reporting it thanby making sure DS knows that "gay" is not an insult and anyone who thinks it is is mistaken.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This happened to my fourth grader last year (third grade) although I think it was other boys. He shrugged it off. I mentioned it to the guidance counselor later in the year when he was having some social difficulties, but no one made a big deal about it. I wouldn't make an issue unless that kind of teasing is repeated or he continues to have problems with the classmate in question. My kids' school has a whole set of rules on "debugging" and the idea is to try to teach kids how to deal with annoying / problematic behavior on their own before always running to adults. Your kids' school probably has something similar.
+1. Tell him to shrug it off/ignore it. When kids don't get a reaction, they get bored and move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:they're in fourth grade. he told few other boys about it and they said he should report it to the counselor, but DS didn't want to coz he's 'not the tattle telling type.'
would you let it go since it's the 'first offense'?
He sounds wimpy.
DH needs to teach him to grunt.
Anonymous wrote:I would be less concerned with reporting it than making sure DS knows that "gay" is not an insult and anyone who thinks it is is mistaken.
Anonymous wrote:This happened to my fourth grader last year (third grade) although I think it was other boys. He shrugged it off. I mentioned it to the guidance counselor later in the year when he was having some social difficulties, but no one made a big deal about it. I wouldn't make an issue unless that kind of teasing is repeated or he continues to have problems with the classmate in question. My kids' school has a whole set of rules on "debugging" and the idea is to try to teach kids how to deal with annoying / problematic behavior on their own before always running to adults. Your kids' school probably has something similar.