Anonymous wrote:I cant tell if this is elementary or middle school? I would want more information about when the prior warnings were given and what they were for. If this is middle school and both boys were given warnings for the same behavior more than once then yes I think its fair.
I will get jumped on for this but if its elementary school I dont believe its at all fair. Young bodies need movement and field day is more of a right than a privilege. On days like today when recess was canceled I would expect extra horseplay. And its usually not an even fair sided story in middle school, meaning, one child reacts to someone pushing their buttons and its more likely to be out of the childs control. I would not allow for my child in elementary school to miss field day as a punishment.
Anonymous wrote:My son got caught horseplaying in the hallway with his friend today (just pushing and hitting each other trying to body slam each other ). The school didn't suspended them, but they are now allowed to attend Field Day..
How is it fair to take away Field Day for this? Would you care if this happened to your kid?
When I talk to the principal she said the boys were given prior warnings about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cant tell if this is elementary or middle school? I would want more information about when the prior warnings were given and what they were for. If this is middle school and both boys were given warnings for the same behavior more than once then yes I think its fair.
I will get jumped on for this but if its elementary school I dont believe its at all fair. Young bodies need movement and field day is more of a right than a privilege. On days like today when recess was canceled I would expect extra horseplay. And its usually not an even fair sided story in middle school, meaning, one child reacts to someone pushing their buttons and its more likely to be out of the childs control. I would not allow for my child in elementary school to miss field day as a punishment.
You are both an idiot and have delusions of grandeur.
Anonymous wrote:I cant tell if this is elementary or middle school? I would want more information about when the prior warnings were given and what they were for. If this is middle school and both boys were given warnings for the same behavior more than once then yes I think its fair.
I will get jumped on for this but if its elementary school I dont believe its at all fair. Young bodies need movement and field day is more of a right than a privilege. On days like today when recess was canceled I would expect extra horseplay. And its usually not an even fair sided story in middle school, meaning, one child reacts to someone pushing their buttons and its more likely to be out of the childs control. I would not allow for my child in elementary school to miss field day as a punishment.
Anonymous wrote:Never heard of a Fall field day before, I thought it is an end of the year reward.Anonymous wrote:Fall field day is the way to go. Beautiful weather.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are they doing instead of field day? This sounds more like ISS— how serious was the horseplay?
Most likely staying the classroom, the referral code says LOP Loss of School Privileges or Participation .
It was bad enough that it was documented, OP. Think about that. Talk to your child. I hope you give him consequences at home, too. It sounds like a lot more than "horseplay". I freaking can't stand a certain type of #boymom
Exactly this.
There is a difference between #boymoms and moms of boys. Moms of boys are great. #boymoms are horrors to society.
I mean, I'm on your side, but you also sound quite fixated with your repeated use of the hash tag moniker. It's tiresome and you aren't making the point you think you are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not fair at all.
It's just boys being boys. All they did was hit and body slam. That's fine for boys.
Your statements "it's just boys being boys" and "that's fine for boys" are both incredibly problematic.
Both statements excuse harmful behavior, lower expectations for boys, and reinforce gender stereotypes that hurt everyone.
You are sending the message that boys can’t control themselves, which is both untrue and unfair to boys. When adults shrug off harmful behavior, boys learn that accountability and empathy are optional, as well as that boundaries don’t apply to them
You're also reinforcing gender stereotypes that boys are naturally rough, aggressive, or impulsive and that gender determines character.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are they doing instead of field day? This sounds more like ISS— how serious was the horseplay?
Most likely staying the classroom, the referral code says LOP Loss of School Privileges or Participation .
It was bad enough that it was documented, OP. Think about that. Talk to your child. I hope you give him consequences at home, too. It sounds like a lot more than "horseplay". I freaking can't stand a certain type of #boymom
Exactly this.
There is a difference between #boymoms and moms of boys. Moms of boys are great. #boymoms are horrors to society.
Anonymous wrote:My son got caught horseplaying in the hallway with his friend today (just pushing and hitting each other trying to body slam each other ). The school didn't suspended them, but they are now allowed to attend Field Day..
How is it fair to take away Field Day for this? Would you care if this happened to your kid?
When I talk to the principal she said the boys were given prior warnings about it.