You definitely have every right to be mad about them not responding...that's unprofessional and unacceptable and I'd definitely get the counselor and principal involved to discuss the expectations of responses.Hello. My 10 yr old has ADHD. He's medicated and has really come a long way in the last 3 years. His biggest struggles are controlling his emotions and the whole hyper part lol. Like he can't sit still and when hes concentrating he just makes random noises, not even realizing he's doing it. I've been trying to talk to the school about it but his teacher doesn't respond. Apparently this last week he's started losing recess because of it. Like yesterday a teacher said "better safe than sorry" and he said "oh my dad says that all the time" Bam had to walk laps the whole recess. I get that kids have to learn not to disrupt the class, and I would 100% understand if the things he said were mean or disrespectful, but they aren't. Am I wrong to be mad? Like, I'm trying to work with the school but they won't even respond when I ask how he's doing. I only know about this because he had a full on melt down about it last night.
Having said that; I think it's really hard and just not possible to know why a student was required to walk laps during recess...especially if the school hasn't responded to you yet. As a parent of 3 kids; I would never assume that what my kid told me is the full, absolute truth in reality... even with your most honest child; you have to realize perception and what sticks out most to one person (kid or not) has the tendency to be one-sided at best.
Walking laps is nothing horrible...he's still getting out and getting exercise. If this was something happening every day, then I'd have concerns, but every once in a while for a child who you know has a hard time not disrupting I think is totally reasonable. - As a parent, I would use this as more teaching moments. I wouldn't act like it was a huge deal, more of just a natural consequence to blurting out. If you know this is something you all are working on, then use it as such. I certainly wouldn't discipline him at home over it or act like I was mad at him, but I think it's VERY important to make sure you don't act like you're mad at or that your kid has a right to be mad at or blame the teacher for the consequence. Teach him empowerment and just talk with him that you realize it's not fun and disappointing when he has to walk laps and then discuss what he can work on and practice to control that.
Again if it was something happening every day, that's different and sounds like the teacher needs more training, but every now and then...well I think it would be weird if a kid, any kid, didn't have these kind of consequences every now and then. They're kids and learning...the consequences are what help them grow. It's part of life and a VERY important part in their growth. We do such a disservice to our kids when we make them feel they shouldn't have consequences.
As a parent, I knowit can be hard because we always just want our kids to be happy etc., but we stunt their growth if we create a life for them that avoids any disappointment/saddness/frustration/accountability etc.
Sorry, off my soapbox now...and OP I'm not saying this is something you do...it's just something that seems to be so prevalent in our society and it's so hard to watch.
Last edited: