Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I ask my kid to pick up the slack when I make mistakes, like forgetting things, all the time. And he does it without complaint. So, I do the same for him. If I had a way to get the lunch to him, or put money in his account, then I would. While "don't forget your lunch" is a nice thing for kids to learn, "families take care of each other" is more important to me.
Love this. Great mom.
Anonymous wrote:You look out the window and you see them get on the bus. Too late to catch them. What do you do?

Anonymous wrote:At BTSN, our child's 5th grade teacher specifically told parents not to bring things to school if they are forgotten. I've never really done it anyway because I work, but we did have an au pair who brought a forgotten instrument once or twice (I didn't find out until later).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I ask my kid to pick up the slack when I make mistakes, like forgetting things, all the time. And he does it without complaint. So, I do the same for him. If I had a way to get the lunch to him, or put money in his account, then I would. While "don't forget your lunch" is a nice thing for kids to learn, "families take care of each other" is more important to me.
Love this. Great mom.
You said this very, very well.
Anonymous wrote:You look out the window and you see them get on the bus. Too late to catch them. What do you do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Going hungry for one meal will not hurt your children, and may teach them not to forget their lunch again.
Wrong. Sure it won't kill them but they will learn nothing in school if they're hungry. The school knows this and that is why it is federal law that the school must feed them if they don't have a lunch.
It is not
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I ask my kid to pick up the slack when I make mistakes, like forgetting things, all the time. And he does it without complaint. So, I do the same for him. If I had a way to get the lunch to him, or put money in his account, then I would. While "don't forget your lunch" is a nice thing for kids to learn, "families take care of each other" is more important to me.
Love this. Great mom.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Going hungry for one meal will not hurt your children, and may teach them not to forget their lunch again.
Anonymous wrote:In MCPS, they won't go hungry. The school will offer a cheese sandwich as an alternative.
At some point, the kid needs to learn to remember his stuff. Maybe not at 6, but 10, 11? Yes. I assume OP's kid is around that age since the OP posted in the Tweens/Teens section.
What if your kid constantly forgot to bring HW home, or HW to school? At some point, you have to make your kid take personal responsibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Going hungry for one meal will not hurt your children, and may teach them not to forget their lunch again.
Wrong. Sure it won't kill them but they will learn nothing in school if they're hungry. The school knows this and that is why it is federal law that the school must feed them if they don't have a lunch.