Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is sad.
So many factors cause this. Five year-olds are generally too young to sit in a classroom all day. How much recess time do these kids get?
I am 41 and when I was growing up, public kindergarten was a half day. You got AM or PM along lots of free time and recess. School is too long for the children and for these hardworking teachers.
We've never had issues of significance OP is describing, but the issues we have had are all worse at recess. The staffing issues are so bad for recess monitors, and the ones they can get are mostly checked out. We've been playing a bit of a whack-a-mole with bullying this year for our second grader, and it's all been at recess. To its credit the school has been good at responding and we've been able to get them all under control, but we'd need to overhaul recess significantly to make more recess a solution, in my eyes.
Anonymous wrote:This is sad.
So many factors cause this. Five year-olds are generally too young to sit in a classroom all day. How much recess time do these kids get?
I am 41 and when I was growing up, public kindergarten was a half day. You got AM or PM along lots of free time and recess. School is too long for the children and for these hardworking teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No dog in this fight, but what do you want the school to actually do? If the parents don't agree their child is special ed/or has mental health issues, the school has to legally give that child an education, and can't just yank them out of class.
And, I agree it's a huge problem. I just don't know what the solution is
I don’t care if the parents of the violent child agree or not. MCPS has programs for children with emotional disabilities. They have great teacher-student ratios and the staff know what they’ve signed up for. The child will get an education. The school should transfer him tomorrow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call the police and press charges.
Yes. Every time. You stand in the main office or the principal’s office and you call 911 and wait for an officer to respond. The school has zero incentive or ability to deal with violence in elementary school. But the parent of the kid having a police report written about them does have some incentive and ability. The squeaky wheel gets the grease.
-a teacher
Anonymous wrote:Violence is not the correct word. These children are having extremely physical/emotional/violent tantrums. I still think a child like this needs to be pulled from their school asap. OP is making it sound like a war zone and it’s not.
Anonymous wrote:You can't just transfer a student to an emotional disabilities program. It's for kids with IEP's. If the student doesn't have an IEP, it takes months to get one - there are laws in place to prevent someone from "labeling" a child. Literally takes months even if you fast track it. My daughter had a child removed from her classroom and placed in a specialized program pretty quickly but that child already had an IEP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I don’t care if the parents of the violent child agree or not. MCPS has programs for children with emotional disabilities. They have great teacher-student ratios and the staff know what they’ve signed up for. The child will get an education. The school should transfer him tomorrow.
They can make an IEP happen pretty quickly IF they want to. It's March already. They should have had one in place by now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I don’t care if the parents of the violent child agree or not. MCPS has programs for children with emotional disabilities. They have great teacher-student ratios and the staff know what they’ve signed up for. The child will get an education. The school should transfer him tomorrow.
Anonymous wrote:Call the police and press charges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two years ago we had a kindergarten teacher, upcounty, who got hit by a student, and suffered permanent brain damage. She went on long-term disability but then left the school system soon after. It happens.
What the heck? How are five year olds that strong?