luvsJack
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2007
- Messages
- 20,355
In the grand scheme of things, her handwriting isn't horribly important, but remember when you learned to write, or your child did, you get a paper with three lines- the middle being dotted? Each letter is supposed to be written a certain way, the t extends to the top line, an i to the middle with the dot above the dotted line, the g has a hoop that goes to the dotted line and a tail that goes under? Every single one of her letters don't even make it to the dotted line, maybe only halfway to the dotted line (very, very tiny writing). A lot of her letters look the same and unfortunately, it does affect her grades. Many of her spelling words get marked wrong because an "h" looks like an "n", her "t"s look like "h"s....it's very frustrating. I don't ask for perfection, I do ask that she try though. She can write very nicely but chooses not to for the sake of being done quicker.
I forgot- yeah, taking all of her stuff was stressful...but it's more stressful to have to deal with her constant mess, the attitude and everything else. This is much less stressful in the long run. Plus, when she shows she can be responsible, she'll gain things back slowly.
oh, ok--I see what you mean about the letters now. My younger son's handwriting is horrible. Was in school, still is today. His 6th grade teacher would come out to my mother's car in the afternoon (she picked him up from school) and wave papers around saying "CAN YOU READ THIS?" Which my mother found hilarious.
Not funny that his handwriting was so bad but the way that teacher was acting. I mean, she was really getting all bent out of shape. Anyway, when he realized that he was getting punished for bad grades and he was getting bad grades because they couldn't read his handwriting (because he can most certainly spell--he is the go to person in our house on how to spell anything), he straightened it up enough so that they could read it.
Finally, my friends father called a cease fire and stated that my friend could roll the towels that went in her bathroom and the mother could fold her towels into squares. Problem solved. I have thought about that many times in dealing with my teens. Sometimes when I say "do it MY way", I stop and think, "does it really matter that much"? If it doesn't then I let them do it their way or we find a compromise.

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I am all about natural consequences. If you go out with grungy clothes, people are going to stare at you and make you feel uncomfortable, so you'd better do your laundry. If the kitchen isn't clean, I can't make meals, so it's PB&J or microwaved soup. If you don't do your schoolwork (we homeschool, BTW), you will not have the necessary information to follow your career dreams and you may end up in a job you hate.