| Humiliation
in the classroom
Q. My son (Talen) currently attends a Catholic school. He
is in the Kindergarten. He has a very strong personality and
wants his way ALL of the time in class and wants to do things
in his own time. He gives his teacher a hard time and sometimes
gets very angry (arms tightly crossed over his chest, red face,
crying). This is the problem: About 3 weeks ago, 4 boys in his
class were "acting up" (including my son), and they
were all reprimanded in front of the entire class by their teacher.
She told these boys that "since the girls are behaving so
nicely today, I am going to go home and bring in wigs and skirts
to dress (these 4 boys) up the next day in school so they can
feel how it is to behave themselves nicely (like the girls).
My son took immediate offense to her tactic and stood up in front
of the entire class and crossed his arms tightly to his chest,
face turned beet red, and pretended to shoot an arrow at her.
She wrote me a note stating that my son needed psychological
help and she referred to him as "a possible Columbine High
student to come back and shoot her down." I am totally appalled
with this teacher's tactics in her classroom, but do not want
to pull my son from the class because I'm not sure if this would
hurt him more, or to teach him to run away from problems. Many
other parents have had problems with this teacher before. Since
this incident in school happened his behavior has escalated to
going down to the principals office 2x's in one week. I don't
know what to do.
A. It breaks my heart to hear stories about children who have
to suffer this kind of humiliation. I admire you son for refusing
to accept it. It makes be so mad when children are blamed for
their misbehavior, but teachers never take responsibility for
their own. I understand your dilemma about not wanting to be
over protective. In all of our Positive Discipline books, we
strongly recommend again this. However, there is a time to know
that it is not over protection, but advocacy. I would not allow
my child to remain in a room with a teacher who treated children
so disrespectfully. I would find a respectful teacher and then
work with your son on learning how to be respectful. I would
let him know that you want him to be in a respectful environment
and that you then expect him to do his part. If you want to know
what a respectful classroom would look like, read Positive Discipline
in the Classroom.
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