Aizle wrote:
Understood on both points. However:
1. He hasn't even done the research to see if it is a concern, but seems to be reacting from whatever fear has been put into him from this board or Fox news.
This has already been addressed.
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2. He actually does have things he can do about it, such as move to a different school district, find a private school or home school.
All ridiculous options. You also forgot several other options, including "ignore it, hope for the best, and deal with it if it comes up" and "work to change bad policies".
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3. It's literally like a couple weeks before the start of school. If this was something that was a real concern, it's absolutely piss poor planning that he's only now looking into it. Either researching the rules, or starting to coach his kid into how to behave in public.
First, my child does not have a behavior problem, and based upon how he's handled pre-school, he will at least not be one of the primary trouble-makers. That said, he is a boy, and acts like one. He behaves fine in public. As for piss-poor planning, tell me - what further planning is necessary? How much prep-work do you think it takes to decide whether to ask a teacher what her school's policy is and how she enforces it? I'm deciding
the best way to research the policy - should I research the policy prior to researching the policy? Does that make sense to you?
Yeah, I'm with Taskiss and others on this one. I live in a conservative county so the county policies are likely not to be too ridiculous, but it is a liberal state and the state runs the school system. Overall, I'm just not going to worry about it for the time being and see how it goes. If my child is mistreated, then I'll deal with it then. I doubt he'll get in any trouble, but I hope they don't spend too much time preventing fun games like dodgeball, etc. We'll see.