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General Parenting
a fight in the making
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<blockquote data-quote="svengandhi" data-source="post: 481988" data-attributes="member: 3493"><p>I have 4 sons and have been around lots of little boys over the years. At pre-k age, they often refer to each other as things like "poopy." The normal reaction is to laugh and say "No, YOU'RE poopy!" My oldest son is mildly Aspie and it just went totally over his head when people were teasing him, it sounds like this might have happened with V as well. I also agree with MWM that the boy who used those words is also not socially appropriate. Perhaps he also has some type of plan in place for his behaviors.</p><p></p><p>Maybe the teachers could do a general teaching unit on nice words vs. mean words and have the kids go around in a circle saying nice words. If a kid says a mean word, the teacher should say that's not a nice word, can anyone think of a nice word to say instead and maybe call on V to see if he is getting the lesson. I would suggest something like that at my meeting.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="svengandhi, post: 481988, member: 3493"] I have 4 sons and have been around lots of little boys over the years. At pre-k age, they often refer to each other as things like "poopy." The normal reaction is to laugh and say "No, YOU'RE poopy!" My oldest son is mildly Aspie and it just went totally over his head when people were teasing him, it sounds like this might have happened with V as well. I also agree with MWM that the boy who used those words is also not socially appropriate. Perhaps he also has some type of plan in place for his behaviors. Maybe the teachers could do a general teaching unit on nice words vs. mean words and have the kids go around in a circle saying nice words. If a kid says a mean word, the teacher should say that's not a nice word, can anyone think of a nice word to say instead and maybe call on V to see if he is getting the lesson. I would suggest something like that at my meeting. [/QUOTE]
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a fight in the making
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