Any advise out there...
I'm finding myself very frustrated with my son's school lately.
I have three older kids, the last one graduated High School last year, so I'm not really new at this.
I have two younger kids, one just started Kindergarten.
His teacher has been out for two weeks and will be out again next week.
They won't give out any information as to when she will be returning or why she is out.
My son is really stressed out about it.
He even woke up crying two nights this week saying his teacher is dead.
I understand respecting the teachers privacy but I wish they would give us some clue as to when she might return.
They were very rude when I asked if they knew when she might be coming back
or if she was taking an extended leave.
They said they just can't comment on the situation.
Then... I'm having an issue with their method of discipline.
They have smiley faces. They start the day with a smiley face.
Then they change it to a yellow warning face.
And then to a Blue sad face...which is a call home.
So two days this week DS got a call home.
I talked to him about what happened but he's FIVE.
He really can't have a big conversation about it.
I am worried that he is going to think a call home is no big deal.
I really don't want to get on him right when he comes home.
I just feel like they should do more to handle the discipline at school.
I don't feel that I should have to discipline him at home for something that happened at school.
Plus a five year old is not really going to make the connection 4 hours later.
Am I supposed to punish him at home for something he did 4 hours earlier at school?
Can someone explain the best way to handle "The call home"
Thanks
Suz
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As far as the teacher being out and your concern that your child is getting affected by it...thats valid....is there a class mom who could at least approach the admin to say, kids are scared, etc...no need to divulge teacher issues, but parents do deserve to have an idea if/when someone will be returning or per chance, not returning.
And then there are the parents (few of them, thankfully) who insist that their little angel "wouldn't do that" or "doesn't do that at home." Well, little angel probably doesn't do it at home b/c there's no audience for it like at school. Or they do, in fact, do it at home and the parents ignore it or allow it (like backtalk).
I DO agree with backing up discipline when truly necessary.
Anyone who has suggested otherwise would be completely and totally wrong.
I simply do not agree that this would be the acceptable action in this case.
I would not discipline my child because a teacher was unable to maintain adequate structure and discipline in her own classroom.
If 'messing around' is the best this teacher can come up with, not (hitting, throwing, yelling, etc..) no way am I going to discipline my 5 year old for 'messing around'.
Yes, teachers are there to TEACH....
But, in K, the first semester, the biggest thing that the teacher is supposed to be teaching is how to exist/behave in a school/classroom situation... (sit quietly during this time, walk nicely in line, etc... etc...)
I would not discipline/punish/stress a child who is already having issues with anxiety.
Those who are crying boo-hoo, a teacher can't do anything to discipline a child are also very very wrong. I've been around the block long enough to see different methods of discipline.
both effective - such as sitting our recess on the sidelines... being place with their seat isolated from the others so that they are not interacting/messing around. Being sensitive to any valid issues that may be contributing to the problem ( don't sit this kid next to this kid... being aware of anxiety... etc... )
and ineffective - constant threats and warnings with NO other action whatsoever to further overwhelm and stress the child.
Stressing a child and a parent with a negative and constant threats is just NOT the way to go. And, I would NOT enable that.
Yep, lots of things I can do at school: sit a child out away from group time, have the child have silent lunch, have them sit and watch the other children play at recess, have them sit at a one-person table during worktime, etc. It has to be a really bad behavior, like hitting, or something that none of my consequences are working for, for me to call a parent.
The problem teachers face is that some parents expect a call for the tiniest things, while others never want to be contacted. It's difficult for new teachers to discover where to draw the line.
Truthfully, the school shouldn't have to discipline your child. Your child should not be doing anything that requires discipline. Your son misbehaving is not the subs fault. Teach your kid to behave and listen to whoever the authority figure is in the classroom. There are lots of 5 year olds that can do this, there is no reason your son can't be one of them. You can make every excuse in the book, the sub has no control, etc, but it all comes down to the simple fact that your son should not be misbehaving.
It's a paren't job to teach their child how to act in public. If they are not acting correctly in public, it's the parent's responsibility to correct the behavior and teach them proper behavior. Maybe if parents would take more time and do this, teachers could spend more time on what they are supposed to be doing, teaching our kids academics.
I thought I had perfect children like this too. Then, all of a sudden, they did something totally unexpected, misbehaved once & I had to discipline them.Truthfully, the school shouldn't have to discipline your child. Your child should not be doing anything that requires discipline. Your son misbehaving is not the subs fault. Teach your kid to behave and listen to whoever the authority figure is in the classroom.
It was a horrible realization for me. 
My kids have done this too, but they still have their moments. They also fail to tell me about the times that they aren't so perfect & I've found out on my own.My son would look at kids rolling on the floor and make a mental note to tell me about the “naughty boy at school”.
I thought I had perfect children like this too. Then, all of a sudden, they did something totally unexpected, misbehaved once & I had to discipline them.It was a horrible realization for me.
Seriously, even the best kids misbehave at times.
.
I never said kids don't ever misbehave. But to get a call home twice in a week means that the kid is misbehaving multiple times a day, twice in a week. The well behaved kids don't do that.
