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My wife recently got a call from our son’s teacher and I found out that my 10 year old son is failing fifth grade. He has not been turning in his homework on time (if at all), he’s scoring miserably on tests and come to find out he has been hiding all his work in his book bag. I work from sun up to sun down so it’s hard for me to spend enough quality time with him, but I always find time to question him about homework and how his progress in school is coming along. He even went so far as to forge a signature on his progress report card which is just unacceptable. My wife is nearly in tears because we expect so much more from him and what really disheartens me, is that this is so out of character for him. He’s normally a soft spoken, well mannered kid who loves doing things for other people. Up until fifth grade he has been a straight A student on the honor roll.
As I’m typing this now, I’m getting ready to head home and my first instinct is to lay into him with the belt but even then I’m still puzzled as to what could be the root of the problem. We have no family issues at home, I always talk to him, and my kids never want for anything. I just can’t fathom how he can be failing fifth grade. I’m wondering if it’s just sheer laziness but then again that’s out of character for him as well.
Any advice from parents that have had similar situations would be so appreciated.
I apologize, wrong lounge. If a mod could move it, thanks.
I think that's a big issue there. Make the kids work for stuff. They should want for stuff.
If they have everything handed to them then there is no motivation to do well in school.
I had a paper route when I was young. I wanted a lot of stuff but I had to earn it.
My kids now have to earn the stuff they want.
Lots of good advise here, and no, I didn
I've tutored kids (and adults) in math through the years.
With my child (which we had a similar situation with recently), I would add something additional each night to the math portion that would increase his ability to do it quickly.
For my daughter, she is doing her times table every night from scratch. It must be perfect or she does it over again. This means that she pays attention to every answer. Her grades quickly came back up.
When her spelling grades dropped, I implemented a system where she had to write her spelling list TWICE each night. Both lists had to be perfect. If a single word was misspelled on either list, then she wrote BOTH lists over again.
My daughter has an attention deficit. If I allow her to make mistakes on these exercises then she will not put the focus into it that is required of the task.
Friday is my daughter's last day in public school. After that she will be home schooled. My wife will do most of her instruction (and our 5 year old who can already read on his own). I will do her math instruction. It's not that my wife isn't capable. She is. We just have different philosophies on instructing math. I don't believe passing tests to get a passing grade to move on to the next subject. I believe that we should test proficiency in an area before moving on.
That means keeping at a subject until you can do so many in a certain time frame (twice).
Once she has a subject matter down to that degree, then we move on.
If she is shaky in a single area of math, and we move on to the next area... she will never be "confident" in math again.
Since we have a different philosophy (and mine's been proven to work on kid's who have already moved well past their shaky foundation), we're going with mine for the time being.
But I digress... I'm going off on a tangent.
Basically... do what you are doing... add some timed trials that he has to pass each night in fractions... it will make it quick and more like a game.
as he gets more confident in being able to do the material, he will improve. If he doesn't improve... then move him to another teacher... it might be someone in the class, or it might be the teacher... but either way that will help resolve the problem before it does unrepairable harm.
I work from sun up to sun down so it
Kids are kids, when there ready to let their brain explode you wont b able to hold em back, trust me dont worry anyway whats 5 grade translated to uk schools? Lol
I do not need to be a parent to read what you just wrote, did you actually read it? Really?
Hate it all you want. Why wouldn't it be "one" of the places to look at? I've read and seen a few news reports where teachers, counselors, and administrators have turned a blind eye to bullying and was one of the causes that students have problems in school. Not all teachers were models in their field.
This is going to be really hard, ignore it if you want to continue with what you are doing.
Just read what you are saying.
I do not need to be a parent to read what you just wrote, did you actually read it? Really?
Let us try to understand.
1.) Lets focus on this "no family issues". Really? Your wife is nearly in tears, you work from sun up to sun down, and your kid is falling 5th grade and you have no family issues. Your "first instinct is to lay into him with the belt". You have no family issues, your wife is nearly in tears, you work from sun up to sun down, your kind is failing 5th grade and your first instincts is to take the belt to him? Really? Are you looking to solve the problem or place blame, because your whole conversation has been about how your child has done this to you, and not have you done this to your child. If you are willing to beat your child, for failing a grade, did you toilet train him at gun point? I am not trying to be mean here, but really look at what you are saying.
2.) "We expect so much more from him," what exactly did you expect from a 10 year old child? Maybe the child expected you to be home more, maybe the child actually needs to "want for" something. You write it down like the child is a guy that owes you something, like your car repairman. You paid him x dollars now he owes you are fixed car. You can not expect anything from a child, because they are CHILDREN. Not to be mean, but it seems like you did not live up to the expectations of your child, so your child declared your contract him now-in-void.
3.) Blame, why do you have to blame someone? Why is it.."I
I don't like dismissing someone's opinion because they aren't a parent. However, sometimes it is obvious that someone only holds their opinion because they have NEVER been a parent.
Yea, but I was a kid once. People think that THEIR child is soo different they only THEY know what is going on.
I was simply pointing out that there was a disconnect between the real world and the world he was telling us about.
We got a story about how he tried everything for his family. But when really read what he wrote, we have to see a few inescapable facts. ALL kids have problems in school. All families have issues. Everyone tries hard to make their child the best. But you know something, that is just a fallacy. When we remove all the blame out of the post. When we remove the shell game, passing the buck, and disillusionment of the fairy tell story, we end up with one concrete problem. The only three people and 1 child that can make a decisions about that child's future are not talking to each other on a regular basis.
If there is no physical or mental reason for the child behavior. Then he simply slip through the parenting/teacher crack.
The only 4 people that can fix this problem is the the two parents, the teacher, and the child. Don't let him play the middle. Meet and talk to the teachers on a regular basis.
They will be floored if you do, my sister is a teacher, out of her 90 some students a year, she only get a phone call from a parent like 3 times a year, usually to blame her for the child failing the class. No parent in her 6 years of teaching has ever called her to make sure the child is doing ok. None.
Being a parent means you have to be actively engaged in the child life.
Barring bullying, mental, or physical problem, I just say the kid found the quickest relief wins, the parent let that be a option.
If you want to be angry at me, fine do so.
But talk to the teacher on a weekly basis and let the child know he is in trouble until he pulls the grades. You may have to get a tutor until he catches up.
I’m getting ready to head home and my first instinct is to lay into him with the belt but even then I’m still puzzled as to what could be the root of the problem.
I'm not a parent yet, soon, but not yet- but trust me, this is never the answer.
In your long post, that phrase jumped out at me as if it were in bold, blinking, red font.
I did 13 years of family counseling in an area where it was quite common to see kids barely making it through school, in all grade levels and from all income levels.
Please take a look at that phrase I cut and quoted from your post: you state a large portion of the problem, your "instinct" to strike the child, and then you state that you're puzzled about it.
If there is one thing that I've learned about kids over the years, raising them and working with them, it is that they can spot impending abuse a mile away, and the sad thing is that they themselves do not know how to communicate what they see in their parent(s) and they often will exhibit sudden behaviors out of character to people who know him or her, such as what you're describing.
If your "first instinct" is to attack your child with a weapon because of poor school performance, believe me, that kid is aware of that instinct inside of you.
My first instinct when seeing something like that in a kid is to just pick a time when the kid is receptive, accepting and relaxed, and kindly bring up school grades, then ask how I can help on an ongoing basis, setting goals together.
But to threaten the kid, etc, just builds natural barriers and communication will be lost; I mean real communication, you'll learn nothing of what is causing the problems at school, from him or her, if you're his or her enemy instead of friend.
There is never, ever an excuse for striking a child. It is bullying, plain and simple. How do you feel doing it?
It is interesting when people enter a discussion about raising kids, etc and they want to make a case for physically attacking a young person. They'll use cute words, like "spanking," etc.
Some will tell how they were assaulted and how it did them good. Of course, they have no choice, do they, because the parent hitting them was also the person providing food and shelter. People need to think about how disgusting a scenario that is.
It's simply cowardice and an admission that the parent does not know what they are doing so they resort to physical force. And it is quite common, look at the world, people at every level of society, world-wide, are solving their issues with violence and then, when they "win," talking about how "god" was with them, etc.