Kit'smommy
Luck favors the prepared, darling.
- Joined
- Nov 3, 2008
- Messages
- 751
You can't imagine how much I appreciate the support.
The child is not even five and I think expecting him to learn to cope with the situation at this point is not realistic and I am leaning toward not sending him back. He didn't go back today, and I will probably call the principal back on Monday with a decision after I get a chance to see what he brings up himself over the weekend.
I agree with the poster that stated that this is no longer over the playground. I really feel like the the way the teacher has handled many things has caused the issue. We will always have to deal with personality conflicts, but a complete mismatch at this age is especially hard. His teacher last year was very gentle and he still loves her. I don't think it is unreasonable to expect a very warm, loving enviroment at this age, and I don't think he has received that this year.
He no longer feels safe there. They have not been proactive with looking for a solution even though we have told them we were fine with switching him to a different class even if it means going to the other teacher or an afternoon class, but these do not appear to be options.
I feel like the teacher has undermined us completely in specific instances (including several I have not mentioned). I also resent the fact that every time I talk to her, I end up feeling like something is my fault. I have never placed blame on the school in my conversations with them but have only asked what they suggest to work with him. After all, I keep getting reminded that some of them have over 20 years working with children and that they are the experts. Surely he can't be the first child at the school to have issues with feeling really uncomfortable in school.
We don't bring this up at home but do what we can to reassure him when he mentions it. He has had friends over and has interaction with classmates outside of school. He is excited about seeing them, but just does not want it to be in school. We do everything we can to make him feel safe and secure. And we have run out of ideas short of taking him out of this preschool.
Another thing that came up in my conversation yesterday is that acording to the teacher, he insists that he doesn't want to go to school only because he misses his grandmother during the day. Well this is news to us! At home, he harps only on the playground issue and feeling scared of school. On the weekend, he doesn't worry about his grandmother at all is is happy with a 2 minute call her at some point in the day. He is not clingy or excessively concerned about me or his daddy if we leave him with friends or his other grandparents for a while. We assure him that we are coming back and that is the end of that. He says he misses (insert name) sometimes, but doesn't harp on it.
I asked him last night if he was just worried about his grandmother when he goes to school and he started going through the same almost rehearsed set of lines about missing my mom so much, etc. when goes to school that the teacher had said on the phone.
We have had to work through mild separation anxiety in the past (as in well over a year ago) with leaving me/his father/my mother. The way he expresses his concern over the the separation overall and the very vocabulary he uses to communicate with us regarding missing us is different than what I heard from him last night. I asked him later yesterday evening how how he feels about being separated from me and his daddy or from his grandparents on the weekend (with no reference to school) and he reverted back to the usual expressions he usually uses and has always used. Honestly, I felt like he was using some expressions and lines he had heard from someone else and parroting them back (and they didn't sound like my mother's very distinctive speach patterns either). I am really wondering if someone used a line of questioning that resulted in "putting words in his mouth" that he is now trying out on us.
Apparently, when he is at school, he is a perfect obedient little angel and he is not acting out at home other than to sob his heart out and worry constantly over this. I really think if he were the type of child to have acted out at school as the result of all this and were causing them issues, then we would have received a better response from the teacher and school.
There is no shame in taking him out, and I know that when he goes in K-5 in the fall, it will be with 7 more months of maturity and a different environment.
The child is not even five and I think expecting him to learn to cope with the situation at this point is not realistic and I am leaning toward not sending him back. He didn't go back today, and I will probably call the principal back on Monday with a decision after I get a chance to see what he brings up himself over the weekend.
I agree with the poster that stated that this is no longer over the playground. I really feel like the the way the teacher has handled many things has caused the issue. We will always have to deal with personality conflicts, but a complete mismatch at this age is especially hard. His teacher last year was very gentle and he still loves her. I don't think it is unreasonable to expect a very warm, loving enviroment at this age, and I don't think he has received that this year.
He no longer feels safe there. They have not been proactive with looking for a solution even though we have told them we were fine with switching him to a different class even if it means going to the other teacher or an afternoon class, but these do not appear to be options.
I feel like the teacher has undermined us completely in specific instances (including several I have not mentioned). I also resent the fact that every time I talk to her, I end up feeling like something is my fault. I have never placed blame on the school in my conversations with them but have only asked what they suggest to work with him. After all, I keep getting reminded that some of them have over 20 years working with children and that they are the experts. Surely he can't be the first child at the school to have issues with feeling really uncomfortable in school.
We don't bring this up at home but do what we can to reassure him when he mentions it. He has had friends over and has interaction with classmates outside of school. He is excited about seeing them, but just does not want it to be in school. We do everything we can to make him feel safe and secure. And we have run out of ideas short of taking him out of this preschool.
Another thing that came up in my conversation yesterday is that acording to the teacher, he insists that he doesn't want to go to school only because he misses his grandmother during the day. Well this is news to us! At home, he harps only on the playground issue and feeling scared of school. On the weekend, he doesn't worry about his grandmother at all is is happy with a 2 minute call her at some point in the day. He is not clingy or excessively concerned about me or his daddy if we leave him with friends or his other grandparents for a while. We assure him that we are coming back and that is the end of that. He says he misses (insert name) sometimes, but doesn't harp on it.
I asked him last night if he was just worried about his grandmother when he goes to school and he started going through the same almost rehearsed set of lines about missing my mom so much, etc. when goes to school that the teacher had said on the phone.
We have had to work through mild separation anxiety in the past (as in well over a year ago) with leaving me/his father/my mother. The way he expresses his concern over the the separation overall and the very vocabulary he uses to communicate with us regarding missing us is different than what I heard from him last night. I asked him later yesterday evening how how he feels about being separated from me and his daddy or from his grandparents on the weekend (with no reference to school) and he reverted back to the usual expressions he usually uses and has always used. Honestly, I felt like he was using some expressions and lines he had heard from someone else and parroting them back (and they didn't sound like my mother's very distinctive speach patterns either). I am really wondering if someone used a line of questioning that resulted in "putting words in his mouth" that he is now trying out on us.
Apparently, when he is at school, he is a perfect obedient little angel and he is not acting out at home other than to sob his heart out and worry constantly over this. I really think if he were the type of child to have acted out at school as the result of all this and were causing them issues, then we would have received a better response from the teacher and school.
There is no shame in taking him out, and I know that when he goes in K-5 in the fall, it will be with 7 more months of maturity and a different environment.
They did NOT cover how to handle these situations in "What to Expect..".