Anonymous wrote:In MCPS, they won't go hungry. The school will offer a cheese sandwich as an alternative.
At some point, the kid needs to learn to remember his stuff. Maybe not at 6, but 10, 11? Yes. I assume OP's kid is around that age since the OP posted in the Tweens/Teens section.
What if your kid constantly forgot to bring HW home, or HW to school? At some point, you have to make your kid take personal responsibility.
NP. Personal responsibility is a good thing. And in general my kids exhibit it. On the rare occasions they forget things -- be those things homework or lunch or instruments or whatever -- I handle it the exact same way I handle the rare incidents when DH or I similarly forgdt something important we need for the day. I, as a member of their family, step up to bring them the thing or make other arrangements to get it to them if at all possible. I've called DH to ask him to run something somewhere for me; DH has called me and asked me to bring something he forgot in his rush to leave for work; at times DH or I even called one of our older two (driving age) girls and asked them to bring us something we forgot while we are en route somewhere and can't swing by home to grab it. Life happens, sometimes people forget things, and when they do the rest of the family is willing to help out to avoid problems.
If there's a reasonable way to get the forgotten item to the person, how would it be logical, productive, or kind to refuse to do so and force them to go without it?
I suppose if the forgetting were a really frequent occurrence, this policy wouldn't be sustainable in the long term and we would need to work together to come up with a way to reduce the frequency with which needed items were forgotten.