Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can do this if you want to look like a whiny weasel and be a social pariah. They’re kids, lady. They have to figure this stuff out, that’s called human development
Hey OP, here's the parent of the rude kids.
+1,000!
Lol no. Just a teacher tired of adults taking away kids’ ability to develop coping skills and then wondering why they aren’t resilient
Anonymous wrote:I have not done this, but there is one situation I kind of regret where the child was mean and rude to us, not to my child. We stopped arranging playdates and encouraged our child to spend time with others. I think the other parents probably wondered why and perhaps I should have said something, but wasn't brave enough to say that their child called us names to our faces over dinner and tried to blame our child (and was otherwise just kind of awful in terms of rudeness to us during an entire visit). They moved to another school so it eventually resolved itself. During playdates, I will comment or redirect though if I think the children are using language we don't permit in our home or are gossipy/mean about other children who aren't present.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can do this if you want to look like a whiny weasel and be a social pariah. They’re kids, lady. They have to figure this stuff out, that’s called human development
Hey OP, here's the parent of the rude kids.
+1,000!
Lol no. Just a teacher tired of adults taking away kids’ ability to develop coping skills and then wondering why they aren’t resilient
Wow. You are a teacher? This has nothing to do with resilience. Children should not be allowed to treat others this way. Period.
I never said they should but the kids have to divide out how to stand up for themselves then. Parents running to parents to tell so parents can run interference doesn’t solve it. Remember when you were a kid at the playground, you handled other kids. Your parents were not there to intervene. Kids NEED that, I am telling you, I see the results in high school when they can’t even ask me about a missing assignment or can’t handle even a minorly annoying interaction with another student because their mom always handles everything. Op should tell HER kid how to respond to kids like that in the future, not tell the other parents and expect them to fix it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can do this if you want to look like a whiny weasel and be a social pariah. They’re kids, lady. They have to figure this stuff out, that’s called human development
Hey OP, here's the parent of the rude kids.
+1,000!
Lol no. Just a teacher tired of adults taking away kids’ ability to develop coping skills and then wondering why they aren’t resilient
Wow. You are a teacher? This has nothing to do with resilience. Children should not be allowed to treat others this way. Period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can do this if you want to look like a whiny weasel and be a social pariah. They’re kids, lady. They have to figure this stuff out, that’s called human development
Hey OP, here's the parent of the rude kids.
+1,000!
Lol no. Just a teacher tired of adults taking away kids’ ability to develop coping skills and then wondering why they aren’t resilient
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can do this if you want to look like a whiny weasel and be a social pariah. They’re kids, lady. They have to figure this stuff out, that’s called human development
Hey OP, here's the parent of the rude kids.
+1,000!
Lol no. Just a teacher tired of adults taking away kids’ ability to develop coping skills and then wondering why they aren’t resilient
Anonymous wrote:
On your watch: you deal with it right there and then, by parenting the other kid. No need to tell the parent.
If you're hearing a report from your child but were not present: you give them verbal tools to push back, and if it continues, you tell the teacher (if at school) or the adult in charge (if elsewhere, could be the parent).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the feedback. I am not going to say anything. I just remember reading Carolyn Hax's advice column once saying you should say something to the parent. I think it would be incredibly awkward. Kid repeatedly made fun of my child and said another friend hated him several times. He didn't stop until I said for the second time this was mean and to stop.
Dude. I would. And in correcting the child I would tell the child I was going to tell his mother. Then I would text the mother and tell her for her situational awareness that her child was taunting other children and I hope you don't mind but I shut it down. I'd absolutely want to know if my kid was being a jerk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can do this if you want to look like a whiny weasel and be a social pariah. They’re kids, lady. They have to figure this stuff out, that’s called human development
Hey OP, here's the parent of the rude kids.
+1,000!
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the feedback. I am not going to say anything. I just remember reading Carolyn Hax's advice column once saying you should say something to the parent. I think it would be incredibly awkward. Kid repeatedly made fun of my child and said another friend hated him several times. He didn't stop until I said for the second time this was mean and to stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can do this if you want to look like a whiny weasel and be a social pariah. They’re kids, lady. They have to figure this stuff out, that’s called human development
Hey OP, here's the parent of the rude kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
On your watch: you deal with it right there and then, by parenting the other kid. No need to tell the parent.
If you're hearing a report from your child but were not present: you give them verbal tools to push back, and if it continues, you tell the teacher (if at school) or the adult in charge (if elsewhere, could be the parent).
This.