Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, very gently, I think you have been in denial about what is age appropriate and what is four year old impulse control. It’s time to have your son evaluated. He may have ADD.
Or he might just need a good spanking!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm not going to pile on because I had a child who did stuff like this. He used to refuse to walk back from the park and I would get furious calls from the director telling me that I had to do something about it. We took it as a sign that it was just a bad fit and moved him.
I can't tell you that this move was the happy ending; we didn't choose all that well and pulled him from the new place after just a few weeks. We wound up keeping him home with a nanny for about 6 months until he started kindergarten. I worried a lot but he has never once had a disciplinary issue since starting elementary school 4 years ago.
I understand your unhappiness about losing recess - ideally it should have been discussed as a potential consequence before it happened. This would have enabled you to help reinforce the need to follow the rules, possibly helping to curtail the disobedience.
Sounds like your nanny stepped up and did what you refused to do
Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm not going to pile on because I had a child who did stuff like this. He used to refuse to walk back from the park and I would get furious calls from the director telling me that I had to do something about it. We took it as a sign that it was just a bad fit and moved him.
I can't tell you that this move was the happy ending; we didn't choose all that well and pulled him from the new place after just a few weeks. We wound up keeping him home with a nanny for about 6 months until he started kindergarten. I worried a lot but he has never once had a disciplinary issue since starting elementary school 4 years ago.
I understand your unhappiness about losing recess - ideally it should have been discussed as a potential consequence before it happened. This would have enabled you to help reinforce the need to follow the rules, possibly helping to curtail the disobedience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you really overreacted. You should call the school and apologize.
I seriously hope you learn a lesson from this, but based on your post, I doubt you have the self-awareness to.
God help his future teachers.
Op is one of the most entitled posts I have ever read on DCUM and i joined a million years ago. Snowflake mom begets poorly behaved child.
Anonymous wrote:My 4yr old is going through a terrible phase of running off when told it’s time to go inside from the playground. He does it with us and we often end up having to chase him, he thinks it’s a game. When his class lines up he takes off running and a teacher usually has to catch him and walk him inside. They have tried rewards, letting him be the line leader or door holder to try and give him incentive to line up but he thinks it’s hilarious to make people chase him and have all of his friend yelling for him to line up. Well this morning when it was time to line up, he hid and the teachers couldn’t find him. They finally found him underneath a slide. This afternoon they did not allow him to go outside. When I arrived he was sitting in the office with a puzzle, no longer crying but could tell he had been. I was furious. I understand he should not have hid but he is 4 not 10, and an active boy. He was extremely sad about not getting to go outside with his friends. I told the the assistant director that he is to never be forced to stay inside, and that they needed to understand how developmentally in appropriate this consequence was. My husband thinks I over reacted but I thought schools were not allowed to take away outdoor time. How would you have reacted to this scenario?
Anonymous wrote:This is behavior I expect from a 2 yr old. By 4 unless a child is intellectually slow it's reasonable to expect them to understand why it's important to stay with the group, come when called, not hide from parents/teachers, etc. Is your son developmentally delayed?
I think your attitude is wrong.
Most four year olds are active, and as you can see from THE REST OF HIS CLASS, all the OTHER four year olds manage to come when called. The problem is your son, not the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is behavior I expect from a 2 yr old. By 4 unless a child is intellectually slow it's reasonable to expect them to understand why it's important to stay with the group, come when called, not hide from parents/teachers, etc. Is your son developmentally delayed?
I think your attitude is wrong.
Most four year olds are active, and as you can see from THE REST OF HIS CLASS, all the OTHER four year olds manage to come when called. The problem is your son, not the school.
+100