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Bruises from teacher
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<blockquote data-quote="looking4hope" data-source="post: 151741" data-attributes="member: 4362"><p>My difficult child had an experience in pre-school. I got a call one afternoon saying that he was "out of control" and I had to come get him, and he would be suspended for two days. That evening, he told me that the teacher had slapped him in the face. At that age, my difficult child was not prone to lying (still doesn't do it well when he does lie), so I believed him. I called the school the next day, and they of course denied it. I still called Child Protective Services and reported it. I pulled out my child.</p><p></p><p>It took about six weeks, but finally a CPS staffer came to interview my son. It was a horrible time (we moved that day), so difficult child was excited to be in his new home. But they did come back and say that the teacher admitted it, and was required to go to a stress management class. To top it off, the school told me that when I pulled out my son that I wouldn't get my tuition back, and when I came back to them with the CPS report, they still wouldn't return it! by the way, it's a large, national chain.</p><p></p><p>My point is that trust your mommy gut. I would report it just to protect your difficult child. At a minimum, the staff should be trained in proper restraint protocol. There are ways to restrain an out of control difficult child without giving them a large bruise. Your SD can't kick your child out, and any type of retaliation would put the SD in peril of litigation or worse. Good luck!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="looking4hope, post: 151741, member: 4362"] My difficult child had an experience in pre-school. I got a call one afternoon saying that he was "out of control" and I had to come get him, and he would be suspended for two days. That evening, he told me that the teacher had slapped him in the face. At that age, my difficult child was not prone to lying (still doesn't do it well when he does lie), so I believed him. I called the school the next day, and they of course denied it. I still called Child Protective Services and reported it. I pulled out my child. It took about six weeks, but finally a CPS staffer came to interview my son. It was a horrible time (we moved that day), so difficult child was excited to be in his new home. But they did come back and say that the teacher admitted it, and was required to go to a stress management class. To top it off, the school told me that when I pulled out my son that I wouldn't get my tuition back, and when I came back to them with the CPS report, they still wouldn't return it! by the way, it's a large, national chain. My point is that trust your mommy gut. I would report it just to protect your difficult child. At a minimum, the staff should be trained in proper restraint protocol. There are ways to restrain an out of control difficult child without giving them a large bruise. Your SD can't kick your child out, and any type of retaliation would put the SD in peril of litigation or worse. Good luck! [/QUOTE]
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