disneycountrygirl
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2007
- Messages
- 337
Avoidance of anxiety seems to be a good solution at the time - but in the long run, when is the child going to learn how to deal with the anxiety? You are just teaching avoidance as a way of not having to deal with an issue, instead of figuring out how to resolve the issue, aren't you?
And in the long run, how long will it take to heal from the scars and wounds inflicted by peers behind the teachers' backs? Children are vulnerable. Their lives are literally being shaped and formed, and they believe what they are told about themselves. Sometimes the price of being in a public/private school setting is just too high - a ruined life, unnecesary emotional scars are too high of a cost - and for what benefit? All the "pros" gained from traditional school settings can be accomplished in homeschooling too - often with much better results. (I personally am not the slightest impressed with the status quo result that public school yields. I desire higher caliber in every single arena across the board for my kids.)
I don't have Aspbergers, but was bullied in junior high, and I don't care what people say, it's not something you just grow out of or get over. It's impact is huge. The people that just got over it "cause it's a normal thing kids do" weren't really bullied. True bullying affects you to the deepest level, at your very core, in your very soul, and it doesn't matter what the school policies are because kids will never do it when a teacher is within ear shot. They wait till the 30 seconds the teacher slips in and out of the room - that's enough time to get a punch in and get back to your seat...or for 30 rubberbands to come flying at you. They wait till you have to go to the bathroom. When was the last time a teacher accompanied a teen student to the bathroom for safety? Never. And it isn't even the physical assaults that do the most damage! The physical blows are easier to take than the verbal and emotional ones. If you've known true bullying, you know the feeling of your heart starting to pound in fear when you know the teacher is walking out because that's when the abuse will begin. For the record, I switched schools in high school and it was a different experience, thankfully, but that just goes to show that 4 years of postive do nothing to undo the damage of the 2 years of abuse - and what parent would put their child through that when they don't have to? What parent would do that simply because other people, who aren't invested in their child, tell them they should? What matters more - other people's opinions or their child's life?
And really is any teacher as equally invested in a child as a parent is? If so, there is a serious parenting deficiency going on. Not to say that the teachers don't care, but parents have the ultimate investment in their child.
Regarding the anxiety, the parents have typically more influence than the schools. I have a friend with severe anxiety issues (takes daily meds for it) whose kids are in the public school system, and they've passed their anxiety on to their child. Her children are very fearful. A homeschooling parent who has mastered the ability to deal successfully with anxiety may very well be the highest qualified person to teach that to their child.
I personally think a parent knows their child best, and only they are equipped to make the decision about what will best serve their child. Only they see the true depths of how the child is being affected by being in a traditional school environment (if the child is being honest about being bullied - it's just as likely they'd hide it - my parents and no adult ever knew a THING - I was way, way too ashamed to reveal to any adult what was going on - and that's normal for a child being bullied.)
As a homeschooling mom, I don't try to convince people they should homeschool - in fact, I don't want everyone to homeschool as it would be an utter disaster and harmful to a great many children. But why do public school advocates try to convince everyone to go to public school (or private)? It should be left up to the parents, and we shouldn't judge another's choice - the OP knows best for her child and ultimately is the most qualified to make the decision as she is closest to the situation and most invested in her child.

