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General Parenting
Not sure if difficult child is telling the truth
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<blockquote data-quote="aeroeng" data-source="post: 358771" data-attributes="member: 6557"><p>All kids will say things, and if one has herd the term "you have issues" from someone at home they will repeat it. And they might not even really know what it means. The only way to manage it is to keep the teacher informed of what is being said, how it effects the child, and work with her on strategies to get over the anger and avoid the next one. You might want to let the teacher know that he is afraid to stand up for himself. She should be able to develop a strategy for this too. Example: teach him to feel comfortable to ask to see the counselor, so he can tell the counselor his side of the story and talk through what made him mad. My 11 yr old does not like to verbally express what is bothering him, but he will write it down or draw a picture. (sometimes an encryptic challenge for the teacher)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="aeroeng, post: 358771, member: 6557"] All kids will say things, and if one has herd the term "you have issues" from someone at home they will repeat it. And they might not even really know what it means. The only way to manage it is to keep the teacher informed of what is being said, how it effects the child, and work with her on strategies to get over the anger and avoid the next one. You might want to let the teacher know that he is afraid to stand up for himself. She should be able to develop a strategy for this too. Example: teach him to feel comfortable to ask to see the counselor, so he can tell the counselor his side of the story and talk through what made him mad. My 11 yr old does not like to verbally express what is bothering him, but he will write it down or draw a picture. (sometimes an encryptic challenge for the teacher) [/QUOTE]
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Not sure if difficult child is telling the truth
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