When they are at school do you ever go down and eat lunch/breakfast with them
I eat breakfast and lunch every day with my 2 kids! We homeschool!

When they are at school do you ever go down and eat lunch/breakfast with them
My kids love it and beg me to take them. I go each week, but I only take one child at a time. Wouldn't you like someone to pick you up from your job and take you to a favorite restaurant once a week? We live, literally, a block from the school, too, and I am lucky enought to have one weekday I am always home.I've never heard of this before. Really, on regular basis?
I can see on a special occasion once or twice a year. The rest seems like helicopter parenting to me.l
I really don't get not allowing Subway, McD's, etc. because other kids might be jealous. Can't kids be jealous of anything? My kid's turkey sandwich? Cookies? It's a cruel world!![]()
For those who are unfamiliar w/ this practice and see it as helicoptor parenting-simply put, you are off base. It has nothing to do w/ me wanting to keep tabs on him, investigate his behavior, manipulate his social life or monitor his environment while he is out of the home...nothing at all. It has everything to do w/ my relationship w/ him, with making special memories, and putting a smile on his face. As many have stated before--the time will come quickly enough (my girls quit requesting lunch visits around 4th grade...) when he will not ask me to come to lunch anymore; I will enjoy this for now.
I've never heard of this before. Really, on regular basis?
I can see on a special occasion once or twice a year. The rest seems like helicopter parenting to me.l
I really don't get not allowing Subway, McD's, etc. because other kids might be jealous. Can't kids be jealous of anything? My kid's turkey sandwich? Cookies? It's a cruel world!![]()
Your definition of helicopter parenting is extremely broad indeed if you think having lunch with a child throughout the school year is helicoptering. I can see not wanting to do it if it's not the norm in that particular district, or if the child doesn't want the parent hanging around like that. But where my kids went to school, it was perfectly permissible and the kids loved having a parent (any parent) coming in for lunch.
I guess living in a smaller community, things like this are a little more normal. The school itself is locked down except the front door by the office. You have to buzz to get in, then go straight into the office to sign in and state your business. Those secretaries are sharp and get to know which parent of which child is there on sight. People aren't just walking in off the street and heading towards the cafeteria to grope your kid in some corner. There's a process, and you're surrounded by a ton of chattering kids, lunch monitors, teachers, and occasional administrators. These are the same parents you'll be encountering at concerts, games, plays, etc for the next 12 years. I can't imagine being offended or frightened at the thought of them coming to lunch with their own kid.
Yeah, I think the other thing people are missing is that our kids are asking us to come visit them!
I don't see how it's helicoptering, unless it's a remote control heli and the kid has the remote, lol.
I think it's one of the few, wonderful times where you get to be a friend to your kid instead of having to parent them. They invite you, you get to talk to their friends, it's social, you're not fussing over them and wiping their faces with a napkin in front of their friends (because they ALL have crud on their faces, lol), and they just chatter about their day and you get to be in on it. It's cool.
I've never heard of this before. Really, on regular basis?
I can see on a special occasion once or twice a year. The rest seems like helicopter parenting to me.l
We live in a small community too. Of course you have to sign in, and people aren't just walking in off the street. No one is alone with a child.
People just seem to label any kind of parenting that is different from their own. I love to spend a lot of time with my kids. If I have time off that I can go to school, then I will. What is so wrong with wanting to do something with your child?
Yeah, I think the other thing people are missing is that our kids are asking us to come visit them!
I don't see how it's helicoptering, unless it's a remote control heli and the kid has the remote, lol.
I think it's one of the few, wonderful times where you get to be a friend to your kid instead of having to parent them. They invite you, you get to talk to their friends, it's social, you're not fussing over them and wiping their faces with a napkin in front of their friends (because they ALL have crud on their faces, lol), and they just chatter about their day and you get to be in on it. It's cool.
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I love spending time with my kids. Heck I am the one who is always counting down to school vacations!I just think that as a parent you have to give your children certain freedoms. I think me hovering at school every week is not something that is helpful to them. JMHO.
I don't think anyone is hovering at school. The kids ask me to come. We even had a note home from the 3rd grade teacher asking parents to spend time in school with their children. She said that in 3rd the kids still love it when their parents come in.
Once the kids are in 4th I think that starts to fade away. In fact this year my 4th grader told me it was okay if I didn't come to his Christmas party this year. I was a little sad, but I decided not to go since it seemed like the right thing to do. Then when his valentines party came he wanted me to come so I did. That is the only time this year I have been to his school.
Really it isn't like anyone is eating lunch at school every day, or spending the entire school day, every day in the school with their kids. Most of the time the kids are on their own in school. They have plenty of freedom.
Apparently, if it this is not a common practice in your own area you will not understand it and will see it as hovering and interfering, even though there have been many previous posts explaining why this view is not accurate for most families who participate.
For many of us, eating lunch w/ your child every so often is simply a normal, happy part of the early Elementary years and in no way interferes with his/her social development. As others have mentioned, in our district it is stated every year in black and white in the school's student handbook that parents are welcomed and encouraged to come in and have lunch with their child whenever they like (following school rules, of course). It's not like we came up with the idea to institute having lunch w/ your child--it's simply always been done here in the area where we are raising our children.
While I understand how it may appear to those who are unfamiliar with it, I will honestly say, one final time, that you are turning it into something that it simply is not by characterizing it as "hovering."