Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep, you're overreacting on every front.
1. Parents are on the playground all the time at our school. There's nothing more normal. You're "furious"? Perhaps you need to spend more time at the school yourself.
2. Her daughter came home upset that your daughter was mean to her.
3. She spoke politely to your daughter about an issue with your daughter
4. Your daughter is old enough not to have HER mother stand between her and the rest of the world, at least on this level.
I was going to say "I can't believe that...", but yes, I can believe that your first reaction isn't to have a conversation with your daughter about her mean girl tendencies, but to flip out on DCUM about the presence of a parent on the playground. Please get your priorities straight.
I just said that my daughter is NOT a Mean Girl, you seem very presumptuous. I asked DD if she was ever mean to this other girl and she said no, that they just don't hang out because they have different interests. If my DD was mean, I would DEFINITELY want to know, so I can fix the behavior however I do not want some adult to approach my daughter.
Anonymous wrote:I think it would be absolutely acceptable to ask the school to ban this woman from playground duty. An adult approaching a child during the school day, on school property and while in service to the school in order to hash out a personal grievance with that child is beyond the pale. She took advantage of the fact that your daughter was in a vulnerable position, when she could corner her with no adults nearby, and that should not be acceptable to any parent or responsible adult.
Anonymous wrote:OP -- the woman you are complaining about was a recess volunteer. Maybe she saw your daughter excluding others on the playground. It IS her job as a playground supervisor to say "we don't exclude anyone." What's the big deal? Don't you want other adults helping socialize your child? I do! I expect that my kids will be reminded to maintain good behavior at school. It's not like this other mom berated and belittled your daughter. Your daughter should be strong enough to hear "don't exclude other kids" without being traumatized. quote]
My feelings exactly. This was such a teaching moment, even if your DD did nothing wrong. Sometimes other adults are going to tell your DD what to do. Sometimes other adults may get it wrong. She has to learn to deal with this herself. Let her and stop helicoptering.
Anonymous wrote:OP, do you have only your daughter's description of the incident? Remember that children don't see their own behavior objectively -- it's hard enough for adults. You could discuss it with the other mother or with the school, but it was inappropriate to bring in the neighbors and other adults who weren't involved.
Now, one thing to do is to mention to your friends that you regret your overreaction, but since that won't undo the harm you need to find a way to help the other child feel included.