Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would tell my son not to let his mouth write checks he can’t cash. I teach high school and see this all the time - kid runs his mouth and catches the right one on the wrong day. Tell your principal I guess but first deal with your son who created the issue.
He has adhd and anxiety. If you really are a teacher, you understand kids KNOW not to do it, but don’t always have the impulse control to prevent it.
DO have you considered that your son’s anxiety makes him think that there’s a crowd of kids all carrying knives and prepared to use them?
Ah, the people who don't understand today's schools. Same people who blame teachers for being "overpaid" and entitled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would tell my son not to let his mouth write checks he can’t cash. I teach high school and see this all the time - kid runs his mouth and catches the right one on the wrong day. Tell your principal I guess but first deal with your son who created the issue.
He has adhd and anxiety. If you really are a teacher, you understand kids KNOW not to do it, but don’t always have the impulse control to prevent it.
DO have you considered that your son’s anxiety makes him think that there’s a crowd of kids all carrying knives and prepared to use them?
Anonymous wrote:My kid has a mouth and he pissed off a kid, who has no threatened to beat him up tomorrow. His crowd is known to carry knives, too. There are no school resource officers anymore. So it's not like my kid can go tell police, who might keep an eye on the situation.
What would you tell your son to do? He has already apologized. But that doesn't matter much....because.....teens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you making fun of this, my kid goes to a DCPS and one of his friends mouthed off to an upper-classman two years ago (Pre-covid). He was beaten up pretty badly the next day--pushed down and pummeled in the gut and head by a group of kids. My kid got hauled in to testify about what went down.
This stuff definitely happens in some schools. Just maybe not in your bubble.
The issue is... i would move heaven and hell to make sure my.kid didn't go to a violent school. Why haven't you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you making fun of this, my kid goes to a DCPS and one of his friends mouthed off to an upper-classman two years ago (Pre-covid). He was beaten up pretty badly the next day--pushed down and pummeled in the gut and head by a group of kids. My kid got hauled in to testify about what went down.
This stuff definitely happens in some schools. Just maybe not in your bubble.
The issue is... i would move heaven and hell to make sure my.kid didn't go to a violent school. Why haven't you?
Anonymous wrote:For those of you making fun of this, my kid goes to a DCPS and one of his friends mouthed off to an upper-classman two years ago (Pre-covid). He was beaten up pretty badly the next day--pushed down and pummeled in the gut and head by a group of kids. My kid got hauled in to testify about what went down.
This stuff definitely happens in some schools. Just maybe not in your bubble.
Anonymous wrote:For those of you making fun of this, my kid goes to a DCPS and one of his friends mouthed off to an upper-classman two years ago (Pre-covid). He was beaten up pretty badly the next day--pushed down and pummeled in the gut and head by a group of kids. My kid got hauled in to testify about what went down.
This stuff definitely happens in some schools. Just maybe not in your bubble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At some point he has to learn to control his mouth. What happens when he’s outside of school and says something? No resource officers there either. He can’t rely on someone else being willing to defend him when he is verbally instigating matters. It’s not fair to either law enforcement or the other kids. I bet he doesn’t even face consequences from you or the school for the horrible things he said.
LOL. If only parenting a special needs child were so simple.
The kid is not special needs. My son has ADHD. Diagonosed at age 5 and lacks impulse control. He is under doctor care, takes medication and can be a complete jerk with his words before his medication kicks in. I have never once considered him special needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would tell my son not to let his mouth write checks he can’t cash. I teach high school and see this all the time - kid runs his mouth and catches the right one on the wrong day. Tell your principal I guess but first deal with your son who created the issue.
Oh well if this is the attitude of high school teachers, it’s pretty easy to see why schools are a mess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call guidance for help with mediation. Your child should accept fault for being a verbal bully to the other child. Lots of school’ guidance can help with this. Your issue is that your child abused verbally another child so find a way to address that and a way for your child to make that right. Your child regardless of special needs that make controlling his behavior harder still must accept consequences for his actions and he started this. If you have actual proof of the threat the other boy made in response alert guidance to that as well. You likely need to escort your child to and from school until this is resolved to keep him safe. Words have consequences and even when special needs like ADHD and anxiety issues make controlling words harder, they still have consequences. Your child is old enough to learn this lesson although with his issues it will be a very hard lesson to learn but in the long run very valuable.
As per OP: "He has already apologized." This would indicate that he has accepted fault already. I agree that the school's guidance department should be contacted.
Anonymous wrote:Call guidance for help with mediation. Your child should accept fault for being a verbal bully to the other child. Lots of school’ guidance can help with this. Your issue is that your child abused verbally another child so find a way to address that and a way for your child to make that right. Your child regardless of special needs that make controlling his behavior harder still must accept consequences for his actions and he started this. If you have actual proof of the threat the other boy made in response alert guidance to that as well. You likely need to escort your child to and from school until this is resolved to keep him safe. Words have consequences and even when special needs like ADHD and anxiety issues make controlling words harder, they still have consequences. Your child is old enough to learn this lesson although with his issues it will be a very hard lesson to learn but in the long run very valuable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would tell my son not to let his mouth write checks he can’t cash. I teach high school and see this all the time - kid runs his mouth and catches the right one on the wrong day. Tell your principal I guess but first deal with your son who created the issue.
Running mouth does not mean it's ok to be threatened in school. PERIOD.
I guess. But running his mouth is also abusing the other kid, depending on what was said. If he was running his mouth about a physical disability, or the other kid's intelligence, or his looks, then he's def not an innocent bystander here.
In fact, if this ended now, with only a threat to kick his ass (and no actual violence occurs), then OP's kid would be the one that was in the wrong.
Tell him to STFU and stop bullying other people
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At some point he has to learn to control his mouth. What happens when he’s outside of school and says something? No resource officers there either. He can’t rely on someone else being willing to defend him when he is verbally instigating matters. It’s not fair to either law enforcement or the other kids. I bet he doesn’t even face consequences from you or the school for the horrible things he said.
LOL. If only parenting a special needs child were so simple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would tell my son not to let his mouth write checks he can’t cash. I teach high school and see this all the time - kid runs his mouth and catches the right one on the wrong day. Tell your principal I guess but first deal with your son who created the issue.
He has adhd and anxiety. If you really are a teacher, you understand kids KNOW not to do it, but don’t always have the impulse control to prevent it.
Actions have consequences. Just like the dumb kids threatening your son online has consequences. Show the school the social media content. But ADHD/anxiety won’t shelter your kid from the real world of people who won’t put up with his attitude.
He is a 15 year old without a fully developed frontal cortex. He is learning how to navigate the world so let's give the concerned mom a break, huh?