Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that's overboard. I offer choices, but I only offer 2, and I don't care which the child chooses. I don't offer choices about things like route home (always the same), but I ask would ask whether he wants to step over cracks of hop, walk, hop, walk. By offering a child limited (age-appropriate) choices, you build the child's self-confidence and independence.
I don't offer him unlimitted options for everything. Only to which what he wants to play with and snacks. And if he's undecided or makes a poor choice I offer 2 options for him to choose from but I will be changing that as I mentioned earlier. I thought it was fine to do that because that's what he does with his parents and I figure it worked because they never mentioned any problems when they hired me. As for the route, I don't let him choose any random route. At first we would always use the same one, the one his parents showed me that they do, however at one point when he started misbehaving I felt like I was telling him what to do all the time due to having to correct him and started offering an alternative route which happens to be faster and that I prefer. Also offered that so I could let him know that he would only get to choose which route to take (between the 2 options only) if he were nice from the start. I have started this only recently in an attempt to encourage him to be nicer and give him choices. Before we would always take the same route. For some reason I thought that free choice during play was important or at the very least not a big deal. The snack thing was not my idea, I was just following directions but will ask what he wants out of 2 options from now on and see if it helps. I'm sure he will be angry at first but I'll try it for 2 weeks at least.
Anonymous wrote:
OP, do the parents want him to have unlimited choices for snacks? Is there any reason that you can't prepare two healthy snacks (carrot sticks and cheese stick or apple slices and almonds) and take them with you to meet him, so that he can choose from those two there, eat, then you can walk home?
Yes, they often ask what he wants for dinner when I'm about to leave. An open question. Sometimes he answers something they don't want him to have and they start offering options one at a time until he agrees. They never offer more than 3 because they try the stuff he is unlikely to accept at first and then start offering things they know he will like.
I can prepare two healthy snacks but would have to do it at my own home because that's where I am before I pick him up and I don't live close to his home at all. But I'm willing to do that. I would have to check with the parents though because I think it would be strange if I start bringing food for him without their knowledge. He only eats very few things though, so if I only bring fruit it will likely be a struggle, but I'm willing to try. Usually there's always something left in his lunch box and that's almost always veggies and fruit. I always offer those to him and even when he's hungry he does not want them. Only very rarely when he actually chooses to open the lunchbox first and chooses what he will eat out of whatever is left, does he eat the things he doesn't like.
Does anyone have a suggestion for the fact that he seems to change his attitude on purpose when he sees me? I see him in his classroom before he gets out and he is always looking the same as other kids. Not terribly excited, but usually quietly listening. Sometimes looking a little sleepy or bored, but always similar to most of the kids. However, when the kids come out, he is the only one that looks down, huffs, makes angry faces. Every other kids looks either happy or neutral. Most look happy and energetic. Even the ones who also have baby sitters pick them up. Even if the baby sitters don't even interact with them or greet him or are on their phones.
Most of them also try to interact with their caregivers, each other and some even with me and my charge. But he usually just stares at them. He is not rude like he is with me, but he only looks at them and says nothing even when they ask him questions, even when I prompt him and then offer him a possible answer after realizing that he will actually not say anything. Sometimes I think it's something related to school that he takes out on me, because on the few days that he doesn't have school and I go straight to his house he is happy to see me, always. But I have tried asking him, he only said school was not fine two times, and he was nice to me on those days. All the other days he does not mention anything unpleasant happening. I also mentioned this to his parents, they also talked to him and he says the same to them, according to them. But he is very difficult to talk to and often says nothing when you talk to him and his parents tend to accept that a lot, which is not so good for me because I don't think it's acceptable for a child to not at least acknowledge you when you talk to them and he does that to me often. And of course I always tell him that we need to reply when someone talks to us, and then he does, sometimes grumpily sometimes claims he did not listen to me (even when he did). But he still does that regularly, I guess it's a habit at this point.
I always greet him happily and treat him nicely no matter what and always use that to explain that we can be nice to people even when we don't feel well, as I also don't feel well all of the time. But like I said this hasn't been having a lasting effect and it's kind of discouraging for me to go to work happy, expecting a good day or at least an okay one, ready to greet him with a happy attitude only to have him act out immediately after he catches a glimpse of me. He always know which days I pick him up because his parents tell him that every morning when he goes to school, so that's not the problem.