Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s still a kid. Stay home with her to see her to the bus.
+1. Negligent parenting. Let the kids raise themselves, then complain how they're failing at raising themselves.
No you are very wrong. I actually decided to stay at home, retire early when DD was in middle/ high school. I made sure she was up and at school every morning even though it was a PITA to get her out of bed. I made sure teachers followed her IEP. Her first year of college she failed everything because she can not get herself up. There is no alarm that will wake her up. She basically trained herself to ignore the alarms.
Anonymous wrote: There needs to be consequences for her not getting up and going to school. A parent should not change their schedule or remind a 15 year old to go to school. I am sure she remembers and is on time to go to parties or out with her friends, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s still a kid. Stay home with her to see her to the bus.
+1. Negligent parenting. Let the kids raise themselves, then complain how they're failing at raising themselves.
This. One parent needs to be home until she leaves for school, period.
This is ridiculous. Most 15 year olds are fully capable of getting up, getting dressed and getting out the door. I am unsure why this requires adult supervision. Are you all kids special needs that they can not do this on their own?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s still a kid. Stay home with her to see her to the bus.
+1. Negligent parenting. Let the kids raise themselves, then complain how they're failing at raising themselves.
This. One parent needs to be home until she leaves for school, period.
This is ridiculous. Most 15 year olds are fully capable of getting up, getting dressed and getting out the door. I am unsure why this requires adult supervision. Are you all kids special needs that they can not do this on their own?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks PPs for all of the advice and tips. First time, I was a field trip chaperone with younger sibling and could not get back to the house until afternoon; DH has a set flex early schedule so that day he was out for work by 4:30am and working from the Baltimore office. She missed school that day. Second time, I got back to her but with traffic it was already nearly 10am before she got there. Third time, same scenario but with DH on his late day (on those he leaves at 7am).
Alarms go off 5:30, 6, 6:30, 7, bus comes 8:05/8:07; second stop across the street is 8:11/8:13 timeframe. I stop in 6, 6:30 then head off to drop off siblings/ to work. She does not want to be driven and dropped at the school thus we ended up with her catching the bus. School starts at 8:55 but she has a 25-ish minute commute without the bus stops added in. On a traffic heavy day the school is a good 30 minutes away.
No health issues, no special needs, timing is the huge part - while she will be awake in the moment you step into the room, saying she is going to get to showering in the next few minutes, it’s trying to do a one hour get ready sequence there’s just not enough time [/b]but she does not want to compromise on any one morning item - clothes, shower, skin care, makeup.[b]
She does have a friend who is in the next neighborhood who she is in contact with however, that has not helped. Ubers and Lyft are hit/miss; not overly abundant in our suburb. I’m also not a fan of the shared ride option given what happened not too long ago in Oxon Hill.
OP, that's too bad she doesn't want to compromise--but she's going to have to if she's to get to school on time-or find it within herself to get up earlier. You need to make this a big deal, so she gets this done--if you take away her phone for a week for days where she doesn't make it to school I suspect she'll shape up pretty quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks PPs for all of the advice and tips. First time, I was a field trip chaperone with younger sibling and could not get back to the house until afternoon; DH has a set flex early schedule so that day he was out for work by 4:30am and working from the Baltimore office. She missed school that day. Second time, I got back to her but with traffic it was already nearly 10am before she got there. Third time, same scenario but with DH on his late day (on those he leaves at 7am).
Alarms go off 5:30, 6, 6:30, 7, bus comes 8:05/8:07; second stop across the street is 8:11/8:13 timeframe. I stop in 6, 6:30 then head off to drop off siblings/ to work. She does not want to be driven and dropped at the school thus we ended up with her catching the bus. School starts at 8:55 but she has a 25-ish minute commute without the bus stops added in. On a traffic heavy day the school is a good 30 minutes away.
No health issues, no special needs, timing is the huge part - while she will be awake in the moment you step into the room, saying she is going to get to showering in the next few minutes, it’s trying to do a one hour get ready sequence there’s just not enough time [/b]but she does not want to compromise on any one morning item - clothes, shower, skin care, makeup.[b]
She does have a friend who is in the next neighborhood who she is in contact with however, that has not helped. Ubers and Lyft are hit/miss; not overly abundant in our suburb. I’m also not a fan of the shared ride option given what happened not too long ago in Oxon Hill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s still a kid. Stay home with her to see her to the bus.
+1. Negligent parenting. Let the kids raise themselves, then complain how they're failing at raising themselves.
No you are very wrong. I actually decided to stay at home, retire early when DD was in middle/ high school. I made sure she was up and at school every morning even though it was a PITA to get her out of bed. I made sure teachers followed her IEP. Her first year of college she failed everything because she can not get herself up. There is no alarm that will wake her up. She basically trained herself to ignore the alarms.