LuvsDragonflies
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2011
- Messages
- 2,757
I'm also a seeker, sometimes the recipient of unasked for family advice, that's all good. I certainly don't think I know it all either. Just keep your village.
At a time when the school no longer distributes its newsletter in print as a cost saving measure, which actually contained useful information, it's irritating to see money get wasted on this sort of useless fluff.
GAH I HATE THAT QUOTE. I don't need the village idiot, or the village drunk, pedo, child abuser or any of the village sycophants to raise my child.
It takes a FAMILY to raise a child.
Whether it's a family of 2 or 200 of your closest kin. People who have an interest in your child's life and want to be there to help.
Takes a Village my butt. Keep your stinking village nose out of my business and I'll keep my foot out of your ***.
I don't think it matters, but I am curious.
It seems most that are unhappy are unhappy with the teacher. Do they know if the teacher was in charge of this handout? I remember lots of paper in school being sent home. Sometimes it was from the principal.![]()
I just want clarify that this article was sent home by my sons teacher. All of the children in his class came home with it attached to the assignment they needed to complete that night. I am friends with a couple of other parents who's children are in different kindergarten classes and did not receive that article.
The article had nothing to do with the assignment.
As his Mom I was not offended by the article itself being sent home but after reading some of these posts I can see why some parents would be. I just found I personally didn't agree with some of these 'steps' and was curious as to what my fellow Dis members thought.
I'm also a seeker, sometimes the recipient of unasked for family advice, that's all good. I certainly don't think I know it all either. Just keep your village.

And you don't think your kid's teacher is one of those people? That's really quite sad.
That would be my reaction. Our school newsletter and lunch menu doesn't go out in print any more, Spanish vocab lists are posted online, and between "green" initiatives and cost-cutting efforts there is little hard-copy correspondence coming home these days. It would annoy me that a school that perpetually has copy paper on its donation wish-list would be sending home fluff that for most would go straight into the circular file.
I personally don't agree with #3 - kids should be respectful but that doesn't always mean obedient IMO. I think the specific chores in #5 are a bit over the heads of the specific ages mentioned but all my kids, even the 3yo, have chores that they do routinely. And I totally disagree with #7; I think video games have great potential value in households where parents set limits both on the amount of game time and the types of games the kids learn. My 3yo can write most of her letters and my 10yo is learning basic/conversational Japanese on their shared Nintendo DS.
I want to focus on this in particular because I agree and firmly believe that children should be raised to question and learn in a respectful manner. Blind obedience is not what I try to instil in my DDs. In my house we can always disagree but we are never allowed to be disagreeable.
I didn't read it that way. Especially since the sentence didn't mention blind obedience.
A child willing to disobey every turn certainly isn't going to be a happy child with all the detentions and suspensions and stuff like that.
A child unwilling to listen to mom and dad isn't going to be happy as they will grow up being unwilling to listen to any authority figure in a proper setting.
That is what I think it was getting out. For if they intended blind obedience, especially at the expense of safety--they would have been listed with suggestion #3.
And based on many complaints on the teacher threads---they just want the kid to sit at his/her desk and work on the math worksheet for 20 minutes. THAT kind of obedience is what they are talking about.
Folks will just argue with any suggestion, I think because they read far too much into it.
And you don't think your kid's teacher is one of those people? That's really quite sad.
I didn't read it that way. Especially since the sentence didn't mention blind obedience.
A child willing to disobey every turn certainly isn't going to be a happy child with all the detentions and suspensions and stuff like that.
A child unwilling to listen to mom and dad isn't going to be happy as they will grow up being unwilling to listen to any authority figure in a proper setting.
That is what I think it was getting out. For if they intended blind obedience, especially at the expense of safety--they would have been listed with suggestion #3.
And based on many complaints on the teacher threads---they just want the kid to sit at his/her desk and work on the math worksheet for 20 minutes. THAT kind of obedience is what they are talking about.
Folks will just argue with any suggestion, I think because they read far too much into it.
Obedience is a loaded word, defined as "dutiful or submissive compliance." Sorry, I don't like submissive anything.
I try to raise respectful children, not obedient ones. Neither one of mine ever had any problems listening to their teachers and their parents. They respect us and want to please us. However, the can also argue with us they feel strongly enough about something.
The things people choose to get their panties in a wad about never cease to amaze me...
The things people choose to get their panties in a wad about never cease to amaze me...
My kids have had plenty of teachers over the year who know exactly nothing about raising kids. Many of them don't have kids of their own. Some of them do, but their world view is entirely different from ours, and what they would see as good parenting, I would see as child abuse (including most of what John Rosemund stands for).
Okay,so the next time I see a lost child I will just let them walk around aimlessly and cry.No, actually it doesn't.
I'm not talking about other putting other people's children to bed or teach them "things".GAH I HATE THAT QUOTE. I don't need the village idiot, or the village drunk, pedo, child abuser or any of the village sycophants to raise my child.
It takes a FAMILY to raise a child.
Whether it's a family of 2 or 200 of your closest kin. People who have an interest in your child's life and want to be there to help.
Takes a Village my butt. Keep your stinking village nose out of my business and I'll keep my foot out of your ***.
You are saying your children have had teachers that have abusive ways? I am guessing it isn't a public school as that kind of behavior isn't allowed or tolerated in a public school setting. Goodness knows as well views on parenting are as varied as parents themselves. We don't all subscribe to the same belief system at all but that doesn't mean we aren't good parents or that they aren't good teachers because they aren't a mirror of what you do. If being exactly like you is important in regards to the teaching and care of your children you need to homeschool them as nobody is going to be exactly like you.
What difference does it make if they have children of their own? You don't think they have in many cases years and years of experience in an education setting in dealing with children? With varied behaviors and learning styles and all the other problems that can come with kids? I would hardly call teachers inexperienced when it comes to dealing with children as they handle 20-30 a year (or in the case of upper grade teachers 140+) a year and as a result have a wide base of knowledge and experience that even the most seasoned parent could ever hope to have.