AKL_Megs
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2006
- Messages
- 6,037
There was a thread on here the other day about a child who was "punished" by not being able to have a friend accompany her on a family getaway.
My co-worker today, coincidentally, told me an interesting and similar story!
Apparently, my co-worker's DD (7) was waiting at the bus stop on Monday morning when a classmate of hers (also 7) came up and said to her, "Your mom is so weird and ugly." My co-workers DD responded with, "Well, at least MY mom doesn't dress crazy like YOUR mom!" (Apparently, the classmate and his mother practice some religion in which the women wear traditional attire.) The classmate ran right home to his mother and told her what my co-workers DD just said to him. (There is a designated SAHM "bus stop mom" who watches all of the kids at the bus stop, so the working moms can "drop and roll" to work, so he kids were not alone.) The classmates mother immediately called the TEACHER and told her about the happenings at the bus stop. Once the kids all got to school, co-workers DD was made to sit outside of the classroom for a good portion of the morning, and a note was sent home with her. The DD told her mom what was said to her first, and in "kid speak", that she was "defending" herself.
It is my co-workers DD's birthday at the end of the month, and the party has been cancelled as "punishment". I don't think invites were sent out yet or anything, and I believe that perhaps it is a fair punishment for an 8th birthday to be missed. Perhaps a little much, but I am not her mom.
What bothers me and has me wondering is about what the teacher did. Is it really the concern of the SCHOOL teacher what happens on "home" hours at the BUS STOP? To me, kids say mean things to each other, it is what kids do. Why didn't the boy who called my co-worker "weird and ugly" get punished and sent in the hall with a note sent home? Why didn't the teacher get both sides of the story? Better yet, why would a "kids will be kids" kind of every day situation be THAT big of a deal?
Have times changed that much since I was in school?
My co-worker today, coincidentally, told me an interesting and similar story!
Apparently, my co-worker's DD (7) was waiting at the bus stop on Monday morning when a classmate of hers (also 7) came up and said to her, "Your mom is so weird and ugly." My co-workers DD responded with, "Well, at least MY mom doesn't dress crazy like YOUR mom!" (Apparently, the classmate and his mother practice some religion in which the women wear traditional attire.) The classmate ran right home to his mother and told her what my co-workers DD just said to him. (There is a designated SAHM "bus stop mom" who watches all of the kids at the bus stop, so the working moms can "drop and roll" to work, so he kids were not alone.) The classmates mother immediately called the TEACHER and told her about the happenings at the bus stop. Once the kids all got to school, co-workers DD was made to sit outside of the classroom for a good portion of the morning, and a note was sent home with her. The DD told her mom what was said to her first, and in "kid speak", that she was "defending" herself.
It is my co-workers DD's birthday at the end of the month, and the party has been cancelled as "punishment". I don't think invites were sent out yet or anything, and I believe that perhaps it is a fair punishment for an 8th birthday to be missed. Perhaps a little much, but I am not her mom.
What bothers me and has me wondering is about what the teacher did. Is it really the concern of the SCHOOL teacher what happens on "home" hours at the BUS STOP? To me, kids say mean things to each other, it is what kids do. Why didn't the boy who called my co-worker "weird and ugly" get punished and sent in the hall with a note sent home? Why didn't the teacher get both sides of the story? Better yet, why would a "kids will be kids" kind of every day situation be THAT big of a deal?
Have times changed that much since I was in school?