Anonymous wrote:OP said she can afford private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I think the reason you are getting these kinds of reactions is because your posts seem to be written by someone who lacks... empathy. Perhaps if you are trying to get advice and help your child you might try to look at things from other perspectives as well as yours.
You might want to look up Theory of Mind.
It seems you have a child who is disruptive and might have special educational needs and you want to provide a counter point of view. You should be honest and transparent about it instead of posing as the impartial observer.
I get that having classmates and their parents complain about your child and asking for disciplinary action and removal from the class is hurtful. At the same time you need to see the other point of view, some behavior really is unacceptable and has to be dealt with, coping mechanisms need to be taught, otherwise you’re setting your child for failure later in life.
Also, where’s your empathy for the other students and their parents? As posters have said here, their children’s wellbeing and learning is impacted. Parents decide that the disruptive behavior is so damaging to their kids that they pay tens of thousands to get them out of that environment, even when it’s a hardship for the family. That’s not insignificant or a mere nuisance.
You are free to advocate for your child, that certainly is understandable. But allow other parents to do the same for their own kids, don’t shame them for lacking empathy, they are just anxious, minimize how they are hurt etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I think the reason you are getting these kinds of reactions is because your posts seem to be written by someone who lacks... empathy. Perhaps if you are trying to get advice and help your child you might try to look at things from other perspectives as well as yours.
You might want to look up Theory of Mind.
It seems you have a child who is disruptive and might have special educational needs and you want to provide a counter point of view. You should be honest and transparent about it instead of posing as the impartial observer.
I get that having classmates and their parents complain about your child and asking for disciplinary action and removal from the class is hurtful. At the same time you need to see the other point of view, some behavior really is unacceptable and has to be dealt with, coping mechanisms need to be taught, otherwise you’re setting your child for failure later in life.
Also, where’s your empathy for the other students and their parents? As posters have said here, their children’s wellbeing and learning is impacted. Parents decide that the disruptive behavior is so damaging to their kids that they pay tens of thousands to get them out of that environment, even when it’s a hardship for the family. That’s not insignificant or a mere nuisance.
You are free to advocate for your child, that certainly is understandable. But allow other parents to do the same for their own kids, don’t shame them for lacking empathy, they are just anxious, minimize how they are hurt etc.
Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of red flags in OP's posts that suggest she is an unstable, insecure, obsessive and angry parent. I think you need to calm down, stop the name calling and actually assess why you are acting the way you are.
Are you worried about something related to your child? Is she struggling with academics or social issues? Is it possible she might have an undiagnosed special need?
Look at your own childhood and life. Are you in a happy marriage? Do you like your job?
What I'm seeing is someone who is targeting other children in an unreasonable way given that they are children and possibly have special needs.
There are many other posters who have dealt with a similar situation in more mature ways like the families who moved to private or worked with the school collaboratively to help the teacher.
FWIW, we are not strangers to the chaos of some public school classrooms and moved one of our children to private because being in that kind of environment was not good for them.
Anonymous wrote:OP I think the reason you are getting these kinds of reactions is because your posts seem to be written by someone who lacks... empathy. Perhaps if you are trying to get advice and help your child you might try to look at things from other perspectives as well as yours.
You might want to look up Theory of Mind.
Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of red flags in OP's posts that suggest she is an unstable, insecure, obsessive and angry parent. I think you need to calm down, stop the name calling and actually assess why you are acting the way you are.
Are you worried about something related to your child? Is she struggling with academics or social issues? Is it possible she might have an undiagnosed special need?
Look at your own childhood and life. Are you in a happy marriage? Do you like your job?
What I'm seeing is someone who is targeting other children in an unreasonable way given that they are children and possibly have special needs.
There are many other posters who have dealt with a similar situation in more mature ways like the families who moved to private or worked with the school collaboratively to help the teacher.
FWIW, we are not strangers to the chaos of some public school classrooms and moved one of our children to private because being in that kind of environment was not good for them.
Anonymous wrote:Is there any way you can swing private school or even private online school for a year? I'm a teacher and can tell you there's probably no way the school will get this under control if two teachers in the grade level have already left. That means the remaining teachers are doing extra work and most likely burning out fast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. I agreed it’s not harassment yet, but the moment any of those kids screams directly in my child’s face, 100% I’ll do something about it. I usually will just write an email to the teacher, and if it repeats I’ll sent another one cc’ing the principal, letting them know I’m dead serious about escalating through a formal process. I’ve never had to do that, and to their credit, whatever issue my child had got resolved.
In this case there were at least 6 families complaining and threatening to leave the school which might have had some effect. The worst offender was missing school for the entire week so it’s possible disciplinary action was put in place. They also said there’s a new process for responding to class disruptions, we’ll have to wait and see how it works.
The suggestion to keep complaining to let them know you’re not ok with the situation is spot on. The teacher also needs backing to take action, she hinted that more can be done if parents complain and cc the principal.
If a kid screams in your child's face once it's harassment? Say what? Keep making your threats OP and please file that harassment report and escalate through a "formal process." What is stopping you? What's with all the threats and not doing anything except posting on here and calling other posters names?