Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Masks would help!
Lol!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our daycare rule was kid is sent home for first bite and kicked out for second. Three bites in a week is unacceptable.
This is RIDICULOUS. Kids bite!
How old are these kids? 1 or 2 years old?
The teacher needs to be next to the biter pretty much all the time. This is a child who should not be left alone, out of reach, close to other kids. The only way the biter learns NOT to do this is to be interrupted and taught NO BITE each time they try.
Any decent daycare/preschool should have a system for this, because it is 100% normal behavior. You need to ask that your kid be kept away from the biter. If they act like they can't do that, I'd look for a new place to send your child.
Anonymous wrote:Our daycare rule was kid is sent home for first bite and kicked out for second. Three bites in a week is unacceptable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are all over-reacting. Biting is developmentally appropriate at this age. At our preschool they tell the biter, "we don't bite friends, we only bite food" and distract the child.
I remember being upset because DC #1 was frequently being bit, and then DC #2 turned out to be a biter! Nothing we could do but remind DC #2 about only biting food and wait for it to pass.
You’re nuts. First, if biting were “developmentally appropriate” the majority of kids will be doing it. It happens but is certainly not “developmentally appropriate”. Second, your school or daycare should have been in constant contact with the biter to protect other children. You were really mislead, PP. Your preschool sucked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The biter needs to be by the teacher side, non stop, for a couple of weeks. He needs to be her shadow. This is to avoid any future biting incidents. If he continues to bite, after two weeks of shadowing the teacher, then he needs to leave the program. But the teachers need to do their part for a couple of weeks first.
+1
The judgy folks on this thread should tone it down. No parent wants their 3 yo to be a biter and this type of behavior is often tied to a language delay. Have a bit of compassion and give the parents some time to see if they can resolve the issue. It sounds like this has been going on for days, not weeks.
+2
I am kind of shocked by these reactions, to be honest. This is so typical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The biter needs to be by the teacher side, non stop, for a couple of weeks. He needs to be her shadow. This is to avoid any future biting incidents. If he continues to bite, after two weeks of shadowing the teacher, then he needs to leave the program. But the teachers need to do their part for a couple of weeks first.
+1
The judgy folks on this thread should tone it down. No parent wants their 3 yo to be a biter and this type of behavior is often tied to a language delay. Have a bit of compassion and give the parents some time to see if they can resolve the issue. It sounds like this has been going on for days, not weeks.
Anonymous wrote:Masks would help!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My toddler is going in daycare and has been bitten a couple of times. It seems like a major overreaction to kick a kid out of daycare for this. The daycare should help teach the kid to not bite, not send them to another place where the kid bite new kids. This problem is dealt with like many others: read books about the issue, talk about it a lot (we bite food, not friends), identify and limit triggers, and have an appropriate consequence. That’s what daycares do for…. everything.
Daycares have to handle it because the parents can’t come and get the biter. Preschool sends the child home for the parents to handle it. But regardless, no little kid should beYes repeatedly bit and feel afraid. Even daycares should shadow the biter help me just to stop the biter.