Anonymous wrote:PP - using the word "downs" to describe someone with "down syndrome" is considered very offensive to many people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would tell my kid, "You worry about YOURSELF" stop worrying about what others are doing, you can't control your surroundings and if you need a perfect environment to do well you are never going to get that.
Do your work, worry about yourself and stop paying attention to the other kids.
"But the kid is loud"
Worry about yourself.
"But the kid breaks things"
Worry about yourself
"but the kids eats his bugger"
Worry about yourself
"But he burps his alphabet"
Okay, that one is cool, ask for lessons on the playground.
I don't think you are understanding the other kid is attacking classmates, screaming, and smashing things. It is hard for a 5 year old to start kindergarten and witness that. Would you be able to work if you had someone attacking coworkers, smashing things, and screaming around you? Would you dread going to the office! What if your boss said in response to your complaints, "worry about yourself".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would encourage as much empathy as possible.
It sounds like this poor child might be one of the many whose IEPs have not yet gotten to their teachers (from another thread). And the teachers are caught flat-footed without the resources they need to make this work.
So in essense they have been set up to fail spectacularly in front of an audience of their peers. And once they have been labeled as the bad kid, maybe they will get the supports that their parents have been working so hard to get in place for them.
I would agree with the PPs idea of empathy- it sounds like Larlo is having a tough time, we all need extra help sometimes.
But do let the teacher know, they are often fighting alongside the parents of the struggling child for the appropriate support.
I agree. I can't even begin to wrap my head around how teachers keep track of everyone's specific needs and what action or support they are supposed to provide in the heat of a stressful moment when they have 19 others to deal with.
Anonymous wrote:OP,
If the school is sending the kid home midday, this is a serious problem and they know it. I imagine the child will not be there much longer. If a teacher is spending most of her day with him, it sounds like he has already been identified in some way. Give it another week. Then, if he attacks your child, write and tell the school that you are concerned about your own child's safety. It might encourage action on the part of the school. I would not ask what the school is going to do about it. Just address the "issue" with your own child's safety.
Anonymous wrote:DC has been coming home every day talking about "the bad" kid in class - what that kid did each day that was disruptive, how many "chance" that kid got, and how much DC doesn't like school because of "the bad" kid. (The disruptive behavior ranges from attacking other kids to screaming to smashing things etc.)
So, I'm very sympathetic that it seems like this kid clearly needs behavioral intervention support (or whatever is the best fit for the needs) and hasn't received it (yet?) (kindergarten). I'm hoping the teacher/school/parents are on this & suspect that's the case -- but
1) what is the best way to talk to my DC about it - I've been trying "XX isn't *bad*, XX is trying to learn how to behave when angry/emotional/etc or learn how to follow the rules" -- (DC and sibling both responded "no XX is just bad!" what works best here?
2) don't want DC to be an disruptive environment or be upset daily by this type of behavior vs. feeling in a safe, secure, respectful environment (to use Arne Duncan's vernacular). I think it's probably not probably as disruptive as DC is conveying but it's clear there's an issue (and other parents have raised it too). I was thinking of raising it by raising question 1 with teacher as a way of broaching it, but also don't have parent/teacher conferences/easy opportunity to discuss it until November.
Anonymous wrote:OP, here. Thanks for the advice and thoughts.
But basic reading comprehension... in post, note, I did not use the word bad, (in fact was steering my kids away from the word) my children did, I tried to focus on saying the other child was adjusting to a new school.
The child in question is actually *attacking* other children - which has made the message 'just worry about yourself' harder to say just worry about yourself if you and your friends feel like potential *targets*), one of the teachers in the class is spending nearly all their time with just the one child, and child has been sent home from school in the middle of the day a couple times already - so it is a fairly disruptive situation. And clearly a kid that seems like he needs extra behavioral psychological help. It's not like in my other child's class where there are a couple kids who lose some behavior points etc.
I would wonder where "bad boy" is coming from as well. If it's not coming from home, is it coming from the teacher? Unfortunately, I know of several instances of teacher-led bullying which usually starts with labeling and shaming the "bad kid".
Anonymous wrote:DC has been coming home every day talking about "the bad" kid in class - what that kid did each day that was disruptive, how many "chance" that kid got, and how much DC doesn't like school because of "the bad" kid. (The disruptive behavior ranges from attacking other kids to screaming to smashing things etc.)
So, I'm very sympathetic that it seems like this kid clearly needs behavioral intervention support (or whatever is the best fit for the needs) and hasn't received it (yet?) (kindergarten). I'm hoping the teacher/school/parents are on this & suspect that's the case -- but
1) what is the best way to talk to my DC about it - I've been trying "XX isn't *bad*, XX is trying to learn how to behave when angry/emotional/etc or learn how to follow the rules" -- (DC and sibling both responded "no XX is just bad!" what works best here?
2) don't want DC to be an disruptive environment or be upset daily by this type of behavior vs. feeling in a safe, secure, respectful environment (to use Arne Duncan's vernacular). I think it's probably not probably as disruptive as DC is conveying but it's clear there's an issue (and other parents have raised it too). I was thinking of raising it by raising question 1 with teacher as a way of broaching it, but also don't have parent/teacher conferences/easy opportunity to discuss it until November.
+ 1Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would encourage as much empathy as possible.
It sounds like this poor child might be one of the many whose IEPs have not yet gotten to their teachers (from another thread). And the teachers are caught flat-footed without the resources they need to make this work.
So in essense they have been set up to fail spectacularly in front of an audience of their peers. And once they have been labeled as the bad kid, maybe they will get the supports that their parents have been working so hard to get in place for them.
I would agree with the PPs idea of empathy- it sounds like Larlo is having a tough time, we all need extra help sometimes.
But do let the teacher know, they are often fighting alongside the parents of the struggling child for the appropriate support.
I agree. I can't even begin to wrap my head around how teachers keep track of everyone's specific needs and what action or support they are supposed to provide in the heat of a stressful moment when they have 19 others to deal with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would tell my kid, "You worry about YOURSELF" stop worrying about what others are doing, you can't control your surroundings and if you need a perfect environment to do well you are never going to get that.
Do your work, worry about yourself and stop paying attention to the other kids.
"But the kid is loud"
Worry about yourself.
"But the kid breaks things"
Worry about yourself
"but the kids eats his bugger"
Worry about yourself
"But he burps his alphabet"
Okay, that one is cool, ask for lessons on the playground.
I don't think you are understanding the other kid is attacking classmates, screaming, and smashing things. It is hard for a 5 year old to start kindergarten and witness that. Would you be able to work if you had someone attacking coworkers, smashing things, and screaming around you? Would you dread going to the office! What if your boss said in response to your complaints, "worry about yourself".
Anonymous wrote:I would encourage as much empathy as possible.
It sounds like this poor child might be one of the many whose IEPs have not yet gotten to their teachers (from another thread). And the teachers are caught flat-footed without the resources they need to make this work.
So in essense they have been set up to fail spectacularly in front of an audience of their peers. And once they have been labeled as the bad kid, maybe they will get the supports that their parents have been working so hard to get in place for them.
I would agree with the PPs idea of empathy- it sounds like Larlo is having a tough time, we all need extra help sometimes.
But do let the teacher know, they are often fighting alongside the parents of the struggling child for the appropriate support.