Sadly, just another example of missing the point.
I'm not directling this to you (since I don't know enough about you) but I do fear for the children of parents who teach them to blindly accept and follow any and all rules without question regardless of how inane those rules might be. If you want to live that way as an adult that's your choice. But you should really be encouraging your kids to use their independent thinking skills.
I agree that we should teach our children to question but there is a way to go about it properly and in a school setting it can be a very fine line. I also think that as a parent there is a way to go about it and IMO confronting the secretary at the school because I think a rule is stupid and therefore should not apply to me is not the way to do it.
I hate all the stupid rules/regulations that are slowly but surely taking away our rights as parents. Because of this in regards to schools, I attend school board meetings etc. and voice my opinion. I do the research and talk to other parents. Our school listens to parents when it is presented properly but rest assured if I showed up in the office of the school and pitched a fit over something that is not in the secretaries control the school would boot my butt to the curb, as they should.
Interesting story - when my DS headed to college we went through a transition where he really had to work on those independent thinking skills. As I told him over and over, you are no longer in high school, if you don't like something speak up, if you see something that you don't agree with speak up, if someone tells you something that you either don't understand or think is wrong SPEAK UP. It took him a little while to transition from being the student in high school and doing what he was told to being the consumer of higher education. Fortunatly, through most of his life we did teach him to think on his own and this transition went fairly smooth.
Well, with the "suck it up buttercup" mentality that some of you have on this thread regarding forgotten lunches, what exactly DO you believe? Your child certainly wouldn't be fed according to some of you...so????
Again, in reference to a middle schooler 12/13 and I have one in my house, I won't drop off a forgotten lunch. My child will not starve in the 6.5 hours she is in school.
On the days she has longer days, I remind her to pack extra snacks. I also keep her locker supplied with snacks and I keep a few extra bucks in her backpack just in case. DD's school doesn't offer a hot lunch persay, its a catered type affair and must be prebought on a monthly basis. There are no "extras" for same day purchase.
If my DD runs out of snacks, money and forgets her lunch all on the same day then my answer most likely is going to be, suck it up buttercup. I've given her several tools to help keep her organized and fed, if all the safety nets self destruct because she dropped the ball on all of them then perhaps a day of no lunch will help her remember to keep her snack supply and emergency cash replenished. She is 13 years old, I should not have to hold her hand every minute of every day, if I do then IMO I have not done my job as her parent.
One of my favorite sayings and I think it applies well here:
Lack of planning on your part, does not constitute an emergency on my part.