T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
964.1 | Same ole song and dance | STOWOA::STOCKWELL | you gotta put down the duckie | Wed May 24 1995 09:46 | 13 |
|
I can't really comment about this, as my daughter is only 19 months --
but isn't it strange how if the other kids know your smart -- your
labelled a geek or something like that. It happened when we were
growing up and it is still happening -- the more things change, the
more they stay the same.
It sounds like your son takes pride in how well he is doing (until
recently) and I would keep reassuring him that turning in the best
quality work will only benefit him and it doesn't matter what the other
kids think, etc etc (ya, easier said than done)! Good luck!
|
964.2 | | CSCMA::SMITH | | Wed May 24 1995 10:16 | 16 |
| I think it's great you got to the root of the problem. Bullying is
emotionally dangerous because it makes the victim feel so worthless. I
handled it the same way you did, I explained how bad it must be for the
bullier at home and how he wants to get back at others for it. How his
parents probably bully him, evocking some sympathy and understanding for
the bullier. Now the bully is the victim, and the victim can feel more
self worth and realize that he is not the one with the problem, the
bully is. My kids are teens now, it was a long time ago, but this
really worked well and they have become very warm understanding people.
I wouldn't worry about the messy homework, it will fix itself when
his self worth is restored.
New to this notesfile,
Sharon
|
964.3 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Wed May 24 1995 10:31 | 39 |
|
re.0
Once in the while, when my daughter was your son's age,
she would turn in messy papers. She had to alphabetize
her word list and when she missed one word, erasing became
a nightmare. I would comment on the condition of the papers
and if she tried hard but got frustrated due to mistakes,
I would let it go, since it was not intentional. Seeing
how tedious it could be for her, I taught her to make
rough drafts, so the final copy would be neat. She is
in 4th grade now and once in a great while, that still
happens!
re .0 and .1
As far as the teasing is concerned, is your son involved
in sports and other hobbies? My daughter has always been
an A student. She never got picked on as a geek because
she also does very well in her extra-curriculum activities.
She is as much a jog as a geek and she is as much an artsy
as a jog!!! When she was a tiny, we knew she was wicked
smart and we were determined to teach her to apply her
intelligence in as many areas as possible and have fun
doing that. We never push her, but rather expose her to
various disciplines. At one point, about 1st grade or so,
she did get the idea from other kids that nerds were to
be made fun of, even though she was not labelled a nerd.
I sat down with her to define the word "nerd" and after a
few minutes, we concluded that her mom and dad could be nerds
per her description! Oops, she thought, mom and dad were
cool! She ditched her nerd jokes in zero time. ;-) And oh,
how can we make fun of people who invented the TV, Game
Boy and whatever-high-tech-toy-the-kid-is-into!!! ;-)
Eva
|
964.4 | just a thought | ADISSW::HAECK | Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa! | Wed May 24 1995 10:42 | 6 |
| I recently took a parenting class offered by the guidance counselors at
my children's elementary school. I gained a great deal of respect for
these women and their work. One of the things they talked about was
working with children about handling situations very much like what you
describe. If you child's school has guidance counselors, it may be
worth a call to see if they can offer any strategy.
|
964.5 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Wed May 24 1995 10:49 | 10 |
|
Yes, .2 brought up a good point. I did tell my daughter that
kids who make fun of others, who bully others, were really
the unfortunate results of irresponsible and ignorant parenting.
She understood that and instead of being intimidated by the
bullies, she felt bad for them.
Eva
|
964.6 | An update... | AKOCOA::NELSON | | Wed May 24 1995 11:31 | 25 |
| Re. a few back -- Yes, he's involved in soccer, loves it, and is
turning into a good defenseman and a good sport.
Last night, I checked his homework. Appearance-wise, it was a little
better, still not where it could be, but I focused on the improvement,
not on "you still have a long way to go." I did ask him to correct
a couple of mistakes, which he did. I also made a big show of hanging
up his most recent (and neat!!!) weekly spelling test on the 'fridge,
and applauding the effort. Like I said, I don't want to turn this into
a battle, but I have explained to him that it's easier to develop good
habits now than to break bad ones later.
There is another method to my madness: One of the second-grade teachers
is pretty tough -- a real no-excuses type. I want him to know that
what first grade teachers will accept becomes unacceptable further up
the line.
Finally, I've decided that if my son is in the same classroom next year
with this little Timothy critter, I am going to have him (James)
transferred into another class. James had -- or at least he said he had
-- problems with Timothy in kindergarten and now in 1st grade. I
figure, enough already. What do you noters think of this idea?
Thanks to all who have written so far. I appreciate your support. I
was beginning to feel like I was leaning too hard on my son.
|
964.7 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Wed May 24 1995 11:55 | 15 |
|
re .6
I would hestitate to move my kid to another classroom because
of a troublemaker, if the teacher is a good one. Why should
my kid has to dance around this bully? On top of that, there may
be yet other bullies in other classrooms! I would inform the teacher
of past problems and ask the teacher to watch out for future problems.
If anyone should be moved, it should not be your son! Your son
should be taught to stand his ground ;-), IMO.
Eva
|
964.8 | hand in/hand back face-down? | MSBCS::MIDTTUN | Lisa Midttun,223-1714,MLO5-5 M/S E71 | Wed May 24 1995 12:31 | 8 |
| So how do other kids know how well done a homework assignment or test
was done by other kids? Either they sit near enough to see the results
or either the kid or teacher makes this visible (peer pressure tactics
to 'help' the non-conformers conform?)? You might ask your son's
teacher how she has the kids hand in homework or how she passes it back
to the kids....Doing this face-down will help keep these things
private....It should be enough that the kid and teacher knows how much
progress is being made; Why make it so other kids can know too?
|
964.9 | | SAPPHO::DUBOIS | Bear takes over WDW in Pooh D'Etat! | Wed May 31 1995 16:19 | 9 |
| Instead of waiting to see if your kid is assigned the same class as the
bully, talk to the current teacher and the principal now and ask that
they be put in different classes (explain the situation).
Our son's first grade teacher told us recently that she and the other first
grade teachers are getting together to recommend which kids go to which
second grade teacher, based on teaching styles and learning methods, etc.
Carol
|
964.10 | Put it in writing! Paper-power... | SWAM2::GOLDMAN_MA | Walking Incubator, Use Caution | Wed May 31 1995 17:02 | 35 |
| Don't just talk to the teacher, bring her a short, polite letter
detailing your request and your reasoning. Copy the the principal,
too. If you just talk to the teacher, whose job is to see the best in
every child, you may find yourself bulldozed by her good intentions,
and wind up with your child suffering another year with this kid.
I did this last year regarding a new boy in school who attached himself
to my son. This kid is (a) an absolute wild-child -- very bright but no
attention span (teachers think he's ADHD, but his parents refuse to even
discuss the possibility...), no respect for authority or for school
expectations, and tends to suck all his little buddies in to that
behavior with him and (b) somewhat violent when not getting what he
wants. He had left some *big* bruises on my son on several occasions
that Joe decided he'd rather do his school work or rather play with
some other children. Since my little guy is actually rather big for his
age, topping his friends by a good two inches and sometimes as much
as 15-20 lbs., we have been careful to teach him to fight back with
words more than with his body, so he'd just stand there and "take it"
more often than not.
The result of writing and talking to the teacher was great -- Joe wound
up *out* of the little terror's class and *in* with the two boys he
was close to *before* the wild-child arrived in his kindergarten class.
No more constant school problems (intermittent, yes; constant, no!) and
no more giant bruises. In addition, my complaint brought about a
serious interview with the principal, teacher and parents of the
wild-child, which, I'm told, was pretty productive. The parents still
refuse to acknowledge that this is more than a normal stage
their son is going through, but at least they are more willing to
accept the consequences of the child's behavior (he winds up staying in
at recess, lunches, and after school a lot and also spends his share of
time in the principal's office...)
M.
|
964.11 | | CSC32::P_SO | Get those shoes off your head! | Thu Jun 01 1995 10:01 | 22 |
|
Yesterday, I spoke with my son's teacher to find out what teacher
he would have next year and when I looked at the class list
he was put in the same class as another boy that he has been
with since kindergarten (three years now). My son is normally
very quiet and studious but when these two get together they
are wild. It has effected his studies all year. So, I
asked the teacher if we could get him into another class and
she told me to go talk to the office and let them know about
my concerns and they changed the roster immediately. Now, he
will have the teacher he wanted (and that his 2nd grade teacher
said was her first choice for him next year) and I don't have
to worry about it all summer.
His teacher said that parents have a lot more clout when it come
to requesting teachers than having their current teacher request
it. So give it a try if you want. I didn't want to leave the
matter up to next years teacher to deal with, whether she would
be a good teacher or not is not the point. I just don't want
it to be an issue.
Pam
|
964.12 | | infrno.zko.dec.com::C_STOCKS | Cheryl Stocks | Thu Jun 01 1995 17:25 | 9 |
| School policies vary. At my son's grade school, the class lists are posted
at the end of August, the day before school starts, and parents are not
allowed to request changes. (That's the policy - I bet there are
occasional exceptions. But I can sympathize with the school administration
that dealing with requests from the parents of 1000 kids would be
an impossible task. The teachers do put a lot of effort into figuring out
what class each kid will be best suited for in the next grade.)
cheryl
|
964.13 | Mine too | SWAM2::GOLDMAN_MA | Walking Incubator, Use Caution | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:05 | 17 |
| re: -1
My son's school is the same way -- rosters are posted two days before
school starts. However, because we have 2-grade classes throughout the
school (1st/2nd, 3rd/4th and 5th/6th), the administration tries hard to
keep teachers and students together for the full two years. Last week,
they sent home a form to fill out, asking us to indicate whether Joe
would definitely be back next year, might be back, or definitely wouldn't
be back in the school or district. This helps them to plan for the
following year's classes, and helps ensure your teacher-choice. There
is a space for comments, and the instructions note that if you have a
reason for *not* wanting to stay with that teacher, to say so!
Regards,
M.
|
964.14 | homework and responsibility | CSC32::BOLAN | | Tue May 07 1996 15:54 | 37 |
|
Homework and Responsibility
I am looking for advice on how to help my kids to be more responsible
in doing their homework on time and without being told a million
times.
I have 4 daughters and next fall they will all be in elementary
school. 5th grade, 4th grade, 1st grade and kindergarten.
I have the kids involved in some extracurricular activities on 2 week
nights and I am also involved in activities in the evening. My husband
works 2nd shift 4 nights a week, but he is working from home. I try to
let the kids set their own time to do the homework, especially the
2 older ones but it just isn't working out well. I am always asking
them if the work is done, if not when are they going to do it. Also the
quality of the work sometimes is not acceptable and I want them to do
it over and that takes more time. My 2nd daughter( who will be in 4th
grade next year) is what I call an ATNA "All Talk No Action" She will
agree to do her homework and then she slips away and I find her
watching TV. So I am always after her to complete her work.
Anyway, over the years the amount of homework is just going to
increase. I need to get a handle on it now or else I will just spend
to much time trying to get the homework done.
I have tried the usual, you can't go here if the homework isn't
done, you can't watch TV, etc....
My kids are fairly responsible for their chores but the homework
seems to be a big battle....
Does anyone have some tried and true methods to make this a smoother
process in my life....
Thanks,
Jill
|
964.15 | Not more homework!(I thought to myself) | PCBUOA::PETREYKO | | Tue May 07 1996 16:31 | 24 |
| Re: .14
Hi,
I have a 5th grader and I find I have to tell her when to do her
homework. She's pretty good about getting it done, sometimes the quality
leaves something to be desired. Getting her to redo anything is near
impossible. Quite often she will do her Tuesday spelling assignment on
the weekend prior, so as to free up time during the week, this helps
a lot. I won't hold my breath for the day that she will actually plan
on picking up a newpaper for her bi-weekly article assignment. I
pretty much have to help her to remember what she needs in advance.
Homework doesn't just restrict their free time but also the parents! I
can't do anything several weeks prior to a book report being due. Oh
well it's all part of the parenting package.
My advice since you have so many kids to keep track of and a busy
schedule is to go ahead and monitor when they do their homework, I
don't believe that this will hinder their learning to be more
responsible. After all in the working world we all have to live by
schedules that are for the good of the whole group.
Marianne
|
964.16 | | CSC32::BROOK | | Tue May 07 1996 17:46 | 12 |
| Getting homework done is the child's responsibility not the parent's.
In other countries, homework undone is just that homework, undone, and
not an impact on final grades etc. so the answer there is easy ... if it's
not done they face the teacher's wrath and then it's up to the child!
When it involves lost marks, then my reaction is still to let them face
the teacher's music, and see what happens, although I'm not sure I like
the consequences public school end up putting on as well! This is one of
many reasons we have started homeschooling our eldest!
Stuart
|
964.17 | My dog really did eat my homework! | CSC32::P_SO | Get those shoes off your head! | Wed May 08 1996 08:55 | 35 |
|
Get into a routine. My son is in 3rd grade, so not quite as
old as your girls, but ever since Kindergarden we set up a
routine that homework is done the minute he walks in the door.
If I'm watching TV, it gets turned off. Nathan sets up his
books on the coffee table and sits down to get to work. It
has worked really well for us to just have Homework time as
a given. There are no arguments or compromises....homework?
Do it now.
In the beginning, it was tough to get him to realize the
benefits of doing it sooner rather than later until I
left it up to him one time and he forgot all weekend, when
he went to school on Monday and didn't have his homework
done he got in trouble. Now he just does it.
Interestingly, he got an award at school for bringing in
every homework assignment completed on time. Only one
other student in the class received this award. I
thought that odd that out of 25 students, only 2 were
able to complete every item of homework assigned.
Hope this helps, I have a feeling that 4th and 5th graders
are a little more headstrong than 3rd graders are and I
may be facing the same problem you are in the not too
distant future.
Pam
P.S. Just an interesting anecdote. A few weeks ago Nathan
decided to do his homework outside in the backyard. He
came in the house all upset because Max, our dog, grabbed
his homework and ate it. He was so upset because he just
knew that the teacher would not believe him if he told her
that the dog ate his homework. So he had to do it over again.
|
964.18 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Wed May 08 1996 10:46 | 34 |
|
A data point - I came from another country, if my homework was
undone more than once, my mother got to see the teacher *and* the
principal, not a very pleasant thought - enough to keep me in line!
My mother told me that she made sure all our homework was done
properly and helped us with tests and exams until we entered middle
school.
With that upbringing in mind, I checked all my daughter's home
work everynight through 3rd grade. Even now, in the 5th grade, she
does her homework in the kitchen, while I am cooking and doing
chores, so that she can ask me questions anytime. I don't go over
her work anymore, but I do proofread her stories upon her request
and I re-explain complex math concepts when in doubt.
My husband and I have activities in the evenings too, but we
make sure that one of us is home to help with homework. She is
never home alone doing homework, we don't trust the public school
system that much ;-). For certain, we'd like to do more adult things,
but since we accepted the responsibility of parenthood 11 years ago,
we just have to wait a few more years for more free time. I think
the elementary school years are very important, since it is the
time for the children to develop good studying skills and to learn
about work ethics and discipline, so as to establish a solid
foundation. My husband and I *own* the responsibility of educating
our daughter, the school is just a hirehand per say, we are still
the bosses. It is certainly time consuming and restraining, but if
we do it right the first time around, we won't have to spend the rest
of our lives correctly our mistakes, we hope!
Eva
|
964.19 | I remember 4th grade being the turning point for homework
| LETHE::TERNULLO | | Wed May 08 1996 11:16 | 35 |
|
I grew up in Massachusetts and my parents always expected my homework
to be done neatly, and on time. Homework usually always counted as
a direct part of the grade. And of course indirectly, in the way
that if you don't do your homework you usually don't understand
the topic enough to do well on test, etc.
I remember that probably in the early years 1-3 grades, there wasn't
much homework, spelling mostly and the rule was I had to do it as
soon as I got home. But in 4th grade homework started taking a little
longer and I wanted to go outside and play as soon as I got home, while
it was still light out. So my parents let me do it right after supper.
There were a few times I messed up and didn't get it done it time
(past bedtime or whatever) and then I had to revert back to doing it
right after school for some period of time (a few days or a week)
Then they'd let me try the after supper time again.
They always checked my homework, Dad was the main checker and it
better be neat!! I remember writing out my long division again, because
I had erased too much on that math paper and it didn't look neat
or I had put a hole in the paper. Some nights it was late, like 8:30
that I finished up. But I wasn't allowed to turn in sloppy work.
My mom usually helped with typing book reports, etc as we got
older (but I would guess that wouldn't be a problem with computers now)
And when my dad wasn't home, my mom checked the homework. I think
it prepared me for good study habits later in my school years. I
guess they stopped checking when we entered junior high or high shcool
as a rule. But even until Junior year I always had them review my
reports and often had my dad check my math. Because then I knew I
was always going to get a good grade.
Good luck, our daughters are 3 yrs old and 1yr old, so we haven't
hit this problem yet.
Karen T.
|
964.20 | Immediately after school, before "play". | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed May 08 1996 13:08 | 43 |
|
Gee- they'll tell you?? I have a hard time getting Jason to tell me if
he HAS homework. Though once I find out, he's pretty good about doing
it.
Chris is in 4th grade now, and he doesn't usually have much homework.
Something small almost every night, but a 5-10 min thing. Homework is
done (honestly) as soon as I remember to remind them to do it. Gets
interesting - some nights I TOTALLY forget. Luckily some of those
nights they remember. Usually by bedtime they remember. If it's too
late, I wake them up early, to finish. If it's late, and we realized
it, and it's difficult homework, I usually have them do it in the
morning - trying to get Chris to think about math at 8pm, is just a
no-win situation. He's WAY too tired, and I'm waiting for him to get
off to bed so I can get my stuff done. If I wake him 20 mins earlier,
he's fresh and can think better (and needs less help!).
A friend of his, has the rule a previous noter mentioned - do it at
home, the second you walk in the door. No questions asked. This kid
goes right home after school, so interrupting "light" time, isn't a
problem. Chris and Jason have the option of doing their homework at
the Boys' Club after school, or risk not going out (if I remember right
away!) till it's done, when they get home.
I'm glad this came up - I think I'll post a note somewhere (In big bold
letters on poster board!) to remind them of their homework, and we'll
start doing it as soon as they come home. Then, if they want to go
out, they'll (hopefully) learn to do it at the Boys' Club.
If they're coming home right after school, they should have plenty of
time, and have it still be "fresh" to be able to do it. Sometimes
Chris will stay in school a little late, and finish it at his desk.
FWIW - I *ALWAYS* check all their homework, and try to be sure it's
neat. Getting either of them to do something over is impossible
though. I like to know what they're doing, and it gives me a way of
seeing if they "get it" or not.
I dread the days when their homework gets tougher! ESPECIALLY
Geography/History! I stunk at those, and won't be much help .... maybe
I'll finally be able to LEARN the stuff, through the kids, eh? (-:
|
964.21 | Hope I'm on the right track | CSC32::BOLAN | | Wed May 08 1996 17:53 | 51 |
|
Thanks for all the replies so far...
I talked to the school guidance counselor yesterday and he
recommended that I read a book called "Ending the Homework Hassle"
by John Rosemond. I am about 1/3 of the way thru and he has some
good ideas so far. The counselor wants to get together with me
after I have read the book to discuss different ideas.
In the book the author lists the ABC's of Effective Homework
Management:
"A" stands for all by myself.
The child does his homework in a private personal
place, preferably at a desk in his room. This physical
arrangement helps define homework as the child's
responsibility but also helps parents resist the urge
to hover.
"B" stands for backoff
You, the parent stay out of the child's homework unless
the child asks you to get involved.
"C" stands for call it quits at a reasonable hour
Set an upper time limit on homework. The child should be responsible
for deciding when to start the homework, but parents should decide
when to call it quits. The deadline should be consistent, for
example 8pm.
This rules sound kind of abrupt by themselves but in the book
the author goes into great detail about each "rule"
The 7 Hidden Values of Homework
responsibility
autonomy
perserverance
time management
initiative
self-reliance
resourcefulness
I will try to implement the procedures/suggestions and let you know
my results....
Jill
|
964.22 | The family bete-noire... | SWAM1::GOLDMAN_MA | I'm getting verklempt! | Mon Jul 15 1996 13:40 | 36 |
| I haven't been in this file for a while, so I'm just seeing this topic.
My soon-to-be 3rd grader is the *worst* when it comes to homework. He
absolutely does not care. We were exposed to the concepts in -.1 when
Joe was in Kindergarten, as his old school district really expected
childred to be ultra responsible ( a responsible 5.5 year old?? They
must have been delirious!). We tried all that stuff -- a consistent
start time, alone in his room at his desk, etc. If sent to his room,
all the toys presented something MUCH more interesting than homework.
I tried at the table while I cooked dinner. The food burned and so did
my temper. Every fourth second, Joe had a question, generally
amounting to the get-mom-to-tell-you-the-answer method of homework
completion.
I tried sitting with him - he'd push back and argue his way through the
assignment until writing 15 spelling words 3x each was taking 3 or more
HOURS and I was taking two fiorenal!
The only thing that ever worked (and then only temporarily) was having
him select his own dedicated homework spot (the craft table in the
family room) and doing the homework immediately after having a quick
after-school snack and drink. This is a major necessity here, since
the walk home is VERY warm and dry much of the school year. The rule
was no TV, no company, no Toys, no fun until the work was done.
This functioned for about 5 weeks at the beginning of last school year,
and then baby brother Jake was born. Not doing the homework became a
terrific way to get attention away from the baby, and all the old/bad
habits resurfaced. School starts in about 4 weeks here, and we will be
returning to the old rules of no TV etc until done. I'll let ya'll
know how it works out then. I'm hoping for better success this year,
since he is quite used to having Jake around now.
Regards,
M.
|