Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I kept my kid home for every cold, she would never go to school!
Actually, I keep my kid at home for every cold - because then he recovers completely and is ready to tackle school when he is healthy. He does not get sick (even with cold ) very often, because I give him a chance to rest and recuperate. I am SAHM and I can do that.
I see many kids with cough, cold and runny nose - being sent to school - for DAYS. These kids never recover fully and they make other kids sick as well. Most of these parents also dose their kids with Tylenol and send them to school. It is sad, but I guess they do not have a choice or flexibility in their work environment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I kept my kid home for every cold, she would never go to school!
Actually, I keep my kid at home for every cold - because then he recovers completely and is ready to tackle school when he is healthy. He does not get sick (even with cold ) very often, because I give him a chance to rest and recuperate. I am SAHM and I can do that.
I see many kids with cough, cold and runny nose - being sent to school - for DAYS. These kids never recover fully and they make other kids sick as well. Most of these parents also dose their kids with Tylenol and send them to school. It is sad, but I guess they do not have a choice or flexibility in their work environment.
Anonymous wrote:If I kept my kid home for every cold, she would never go to school!
Anonymous wrote:I can tell my child until I'm blue in the face to follow proper hygiene-doesn't mean she will actually do it out of my care.
Just pointing out that parents might be telling their kids these rules and they just aren't following.
Way to accept responsibility! If they're not following them, maybe you're not teaching them well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think OP or the PP who stays home with a kid has a kid in preschool. There is no way anyone with an elementary age kid is keeping their kid out of school for every cold. The public health nurses would have called them and explained that the kid should be in school.
When PP says the school calls and sends them home at the first sign of illness, that sounds like a daycare policy.
Even daycare or preschool kids go to school with colds. If you have the luxury of keeping your child home every time she has a runny nose then you either don't WOH or just have leave to burn. Or you don't actually have kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How do you handle your kids' chronic truancy? This does not in fact make you parent of the year, just in case you're wondering.
I don't have truancy issues. My child has only had maybe 2 colds this year so far. And you know you can get a doctor's note.
The school year/cold season is just a few weeks old. If your child has already had 2 colds this year, you're proving our point -- how much school will he miss miss all of his colds?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How do you handle your kids' chronic truancy? This does not in fact make you parent of the year, just in case you're wondering.
I don't have truancy issues. My child has only had maybe 2 colds this year so far. And you know you can get a doctor's note.
Who takes their kids to the doctor for a cold?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How do you handle your kids' chronic truancy? This does not in fact make you parent of the year, just in case you're wondering.
I don't have truancy issues. My child has only had maybe 2 colds this year so far. And you know you can get a doctor's note.
So what's your problem then? Clearly you don't have a major issue of your kid getting sick from all these selfish people sending their kids to school. It's actually NOT CAUSING YOU A PROBLEM. What a jerk you are, complaining about a nonissue in your life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How do you handle your kids' chronic truancy? This does not in fact make you parent of the year, just in case you're wondering.
I don't have truancy issues. My child has only had maybe 2 colds this year so far. And you know you can get a doctor's note.
Anonymous wrote:I think OP or the PP who stays home with a kid has a kid in preschool. There is no way anyone with an elementary age kid is keeping their kid out of school for every cold. The public health nurses would have called them and explained that the kid should be in school.
When PP says the school calls and sends them home at the first sign of illness, that sounds like a daycare policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How do you handle your kids' chronic truancy? This does not in fact make you parent of the year, just in case you're wondering.
I don't have truancy issues. My child has only had maybe 2 colds this year so far. And you know you can get a doctor's note.
Anonymous wrote:For a bad cold with a miserable kid, we stay home. For minor runny nose, cough, etc., business as usual.