Anonymous wrote:Bullying!
Anonymous wrote:Why not let DH drive them and have the kids do the bus when he is out of town?
We do the bus bc the car line is a mess and I hate contributing to it. It’s also just easier. It’s okay to pick what is easiest for parents sometimes!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your neighborhood bus have room for your kids?
Yes. They have to. NP but that’s the rule - her kids are entitled to the bus even if it’s the last day of school and they have never ridden it before.
Uh, this is not universally true. Its not “The Rule.”
It is in APS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your neighborhood bus have room for your kids?
Yes. They have to. NP but that’s the rule - her kids are entitled to the bus even if it’s the last day of school and they have never ridden it before.
Anonymous wrote:The bus could either be a good or a bad thing.
When I was a kid, buses were a vector for bullying. Mean kids rode in the back of the bus. I had to sit up front with the nerd kids to avoid issues.
A few minutes of talking to other friendly kids a day doesn't make any difference. But being around bullies is memorable.
It also matters how long the routes are. Long bus trips are annoying.
I also walked to school in elementary school (4 blocks). That was pretty ideal. But kids did harass and bully while walking to and from school.
I had to do car dropoffs and pickups K-12. My kids rarely observed any physical bullying the whole time they grew up. I attribute this to the fact that they were rarely unsupervised with classmates. Also there are more anti-bullying trainings now. And people don't think it's acceptable for boys to spar with their hands.