Anonymous wrote:You need to decide if you are willing to work with the family and help support them in trying to help this boy.
If you are done and want to move on, that is fine - and people will certainly understand.
If you stay, then you would hopefully be willing to help them implement whatever changes might be suggested.
As a parent of a boy who has similar behavioral challenges, and for whom we have sought professional advice and counseling, what is likely to happen will be behavioral modification kinds of approaches. Even if there is a diagnosis, and other interventions are recommended, it is likely that significant cognitive behavioral modification and different caregiving/parenting approaches will be recommended. You would need to be part of the team, and you need to be on the same side as the parents in implementing whatever is recommended. You would need to be open to the ideas and suggestions that are made - not decide that "counseling isn't going to do any kind of 180 with this kid".
The school will hopefully also be a resource for the family, and there may end up being an IEP that puts in place services and supports that will help.
While you're still in the thick of though, please try to reframe your thinking on this boy. He is not a bad child - he is hurting and struggling deeply. He would be good if he could. Something is wrong, he doesn't have emotional regulations skills, he feels out of control and scared and horrifically upset a lot of the time. Pain, fear, and desperation are what is behind the behavior you are seeing.
THere won't be miracles. Changing this will be slow, and will be very hard for the parents - they may feel like utter failures and I bet that it is tearing them up inside. So please have compassion for them also. Even if you leave, which is certainly understandable.
Please just try to be kind to all of them for as long as you are there.
FWIW, the single best thing we have done to help my son work through similar challenges is to completely reset our thinking and perspective along the lines I'm talking about above. It recast our relationship so we weren't fighting him - we were helping him. Start with that.
Good luck. My heart goes out to this family and I know it's a very difficult environment for you also.
I'm not excusing the behavior. It is not acceptable and needs to be dealt with. BUT, the methods that can be successful (and success is definitely possible) for managing these kinds of things are different than much of the "conventional/traditional" parenting or disciplinary wisdom we all grew up with.
The first, best thing you can do to help the boy and the family (and probably yourself also) is to reframe your perspective so that you see him, and his behavior, as a cry for help - that you try to answer w/ compassion and understanding and support.
this