jcsbama said:Everyone excuse me, I must be in a bad mood today. I just get so tired of a parent telling a story or asking questions on these boards and then other posters come up with a reason to say that the parent is not hearing the whole story and the child is either exaggerating it, leaving out details, making it up, etc. Can anything ever be taken at face value anymore? Obviously the OP's son was shaken up about what the teacher said. Rather or not the son got the exact phrasing or not is not relevant. The teacher apparently told the boys something that had the OP's son worried he was going to be arrested. An adult doesn't have to use silly, unreal stories to make a child follow a rule. A rule is a rule. Kids don't have to know the reasons, they just need to learn to follow them.
Ok, soap box over.
I totally disagree. The key word here is that the teacher "apparently" told the kids... I'm in the camp that you need to talk to the teacher. Certainly I agree that it is a possibility the teacher told the boys something that made the boy worried. However, it's also a possibility that one of the boys brought up the police thing and the teacher wasn't able to rid them of the notion.
Talk to the teacher! My soap box stand is that, in my experience, there are often misunderstandings when dealing with young children. I think the best way to deal with it is to go straight to the source. If it turns out the teacher DID say that, then it is important that she/he understands how the kids heard that information.
As a parent, would you want to take the risk that the teacher would take everything your preschooler said about you "at face value"?
I don't mind the guns themselves...it is that cleaning stuff that stinks. And don't get me started on the deer head. 

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for your son. Kids can sometimes misinterpret our words. When DD was little she did this. In first grade they had guidance once a week. Each week they would have little lessons about respecting others, etc. 
One halloween night he got home from work and answered the door to give out candy, (still in uniform) the kids ran from our house screaming in terror.
(He's cute trust me) 
Jake was facinated with the different types of police dogs. Yep, no problem with police officers for Jake.