Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Move to the south and live in a white suburb
I live in the South, in a predominantly white and well-off neighborhood. Nope, the kids here are rude, have zero manners, scream, yell, and tantrum when they don't get their way, and on and on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I look for big-hearted parents. Sorry, OP, you’re not one of them.
You’re not either
+1,000
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I look for big-hearted parents. Sorry, OP, you’re not one of them.
You’re not either
Anonymous wrote:Let the boys be boys. A lot of parents are not great role models for behavior. I don't blame the boys, I blame the parents.
Anonymous wrote:Move to the south and live in a white suburb
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Catholic school. A huge reason we’re there is the kids wear belts and collared shirts every day, adults expect good manners, parents correct each others kids. I couldn’t deal with kids coming over and jumping on furniture. We wait until 8th grade cell phones. Not perfect and kids definitely have screens and misbehave sometimes, but much more in line with the way we grew up in terms of expectations and behavior.
+100
This has been my experience in Catholic school. It's a lot easier to instill manners in the classroom when you're allowed to tell kids god is watching and there's a picture of the pope staring them down.
Public schools can put googley eyes on the wall. Works just as well.
Catholic kids know where God cant see.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=j8ZF_R_j0OY
Anonymous wrote:DS8 is no angel, but it would be great to have a peer group that isn’t a “bruh skibiddy” disrespectful jerk pack. DH says I’m being unrealistic (no video games, no phones, no tablets, no motorized bikes or scooters, expecting basic table manners and respectful language, respecting adults) and that I should homeschool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Catholic school. A huge reason we’re there is the kids wear belts and collared shirts every day, adults expect good manners, parents correct each others kids. I couldn’t deal with kids coming over and jumping on furniture. We wait until 8th grade cell phones. Not perfect and kids definitely have screens and misbehave sometimes, but much more in line with the way we grew up in terms of expectations and behavior.
+100
This has been my experience in Catholic school. It's a lot easier to instill manners in the classroom when you're allowed to tell kids god is watching and there's a picture of the pope staring them down.
Anonymous wrote:Move to the south and live in a white suburb