Anonymous wrote:Monitor your child's online activity. Then take appropriate action, if necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Parents can be protective and emotional when they feel their children are being hurt - that is the bottom line. If you are certain the claims against you daughter are false I would tell the other mom what you believe. She needs that information. How she takes it is not really your concern.
Great lesson to model conflict resolution for your daughter. Tell your daughter to keep an even keel and try to understand the emotion from the girl and her mother are probably fear-based. It likely will pass and be forgotten.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I once had to write an e-mail to school counselor about another parent literally harassing me and my DD. I am not at all a meddling in social issues parent, not just saying that. It came to the point that I felt the other parent was so unbalanced and might fabricate issues and be malicious. I was profusely apologetic to the counselor for taking her time with such a non issue, but felt that I had to have something in writing from our side. Counselor was actually very nice about it and said that she will keep an eye on the girls. She didn't seem surprised at all, so either she knew something about this family or this is a normal occurrence and she is used to it.
+1
I would somehow bet the counselor was well aware of the family.
OP, did you happen to notice - it is never the other child's/mom's fault, right?!
Anonymous wrote:I once had to write an e-mail to school counselor about another parent literally harassing me and my DD. I am not at all a meddling in social issues parent, not just saying that. It came to the point that I felt the other parent was so unbalanced and might fabricate issues and be malicious. I was profusely apologetic to the counselor for taking her time with such a non issue, but felt that I had to have something in writing from our side. Counselor was actually very nice about it and said that she will keep an eye on the girls. She didn't seem surprised at all, so either she knew something about this family or this is a normal occurrence and she is used to it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in the middle of a similar issue with my 6-year-old son. The school assures me that none of the things the mother says her daughter claims happened actually happened. The only reason I know about them is that the mother contacted me directly after the school told her there was no incident like the one she (the mother, based on her daughter's report) reported.
Once we got dragged into this, I learned that the mom is a known problem/drama queen, and the daughter uses these accusations to get attention from her that usually goes to an ill older sister.
Anonymous wrote:It happened to me. I knew my child had been mean to the other child, and she even confessed after the mother left (yes, the mom showed up at my house). There were a couple of things though that led me to know the other mom is a little "off". Let me first say, what my DD did is wrong and unacceptable. We dealt with her. And it's something that happens probably every day. As in, no reason to go to someone's house and yell in their child's face, so I knew the other mom was a bit...dramatic. After a few parents mentioned this mom had approached them about their own children "slighting" her child, I considered the source, as they say. We try to avoid that mom and her child now.
Anonymous wrote:"Thanks for letting me know. I'm sorry your DD is feeling hurt. I will talk to my daughter." End of conversation.
Anonymous wrote:"Thanks for letting me know. I'm sorry your DD is feeling hurt. I will talk to my daughter." End of conversation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this approaching other parents over social quarrels when the kids are this age, is really tacky and trailer-park behavior.
I never approached her, not once, I also didn't approach or ask other parents about it. My DD found out from her friends as several years ago my DD was new to the school. Only after that did other parents tell me.