You Want to Do What?: Instant answers to your parenting dilemmas. Karen Sullivan
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Ensure appropriate adult supervision at all times. Be aware of your child’s involvement in activities inside and outside of school. Make certain that adequate adult supervision is present in every situation.
Report any incidents of bullying behaviours to school officials, even if your child is the one engaging in those behaviours. This will teach your child that he or she is accountable for his or her behaviour. Engage school officials’ help in monitoring and addressing these behaviours. This will show your child that you will not tolerate such behaviour and that you want to help your child avoid it.
You need to give them some feedback, make them accountable for their behaviour and help them accept responsibility for it. You will need to raise their understanding of how they made it happen and enable them to look at the impact of their behaviour. Help them plan not to do it again, identify the situations to avoid and suggest alternatives to bullying.
Try to avoid threats and warnings which will shut your child up. You need to get cooperation without building resentment. Concentrate on passing on responsibility not blame, focus on the behaviour not the child, solutions rather than problems. Don’t bully your child.
Make it very clear that it is OK to stick up for yourself, but that bullying is not acceptable.
Assess what your child does and what he gets from it; what need is the bullying fulfilling in his life?
Try very hard to see your child’s point of view. It may be a complete anathema to side with a bully, but you need to understand in order to get anywhere. There may be genuine reasons for his behaviour.
Encourage your child to see the victim’s point of view, and to try to make up for his behaviour in some way. Ask him to think of a way he can make amends to the victim, perhaps by apologising. Perhaps if the victim is timid and shy he can befriend that child and be protective towards him or her.
Look at yourself, too. Make sure that you never, ever blame a bullied child or show any type of bullying behaviour yourself (such as using sarcasm, joining in with teasing or name-calling as a joke). Avoid having favourites within your family unit, and do not embarrass or humiliate your child in front of others. Most importantly, perhaps, have a reasonable and rational approach to the problem – don’t ever tell your kids not to tell tales or not to get involved. All kids face bullying today, whether as bully, victim or bystander, and they need to know that they have rights and the ability to get some help.
Offer to talk to the victim’s parents and to school staff, if the bullying has been happening at school. But do not defend him. Even if he was not the ringleader, the fault is still his. If you do determine that your child is using controlling, aggressive behaviour, experts agree that the responsibility lies first with you to teach your child non-coercive ways to negotiate.
Maintaining a set family communication time – usually dinner time – is critical, Marsh says. Deliberately pose a question to the aggressive child or all the children in the family, and then give each one an opportunity to respond without interruption and without judgement. ‘This is much better than dealing with this problem by jumping on the kid and saying, “What did you do today? That was terrible! You should know better! We’ve taught you for years”.’
If your child is very young, read aloud books about bullies. Let him or her take care of a pet. Invite other children over to your house and monitor them. Let them play in a non-competitive way.
Enrol an older child into groups that encourage cooperation and friendship, such as social groups or Scouts. Have him or her volunteer to learn the joy of helping others.
Remember: you are not alone. Other parents have had this problem and fixed it. One parent said the best thing that ever happened in their son’s life was when he changed from being a bully into a compassionate human being.
Should my child be encouraged to use a calculator for maths homework?
Many parents are unsure of what is acceptable practice and what is encouraged by the school. Your child may be completing homework in record time by using a calculator for what was intended to be mental maths homework, or he may genuinely be following instructions. Calculators form a part of most maths teaching these days (see below), and their use is often condoned and indeed encouraged. If in doubt, ask your child’s teacher for clarification of policy regarding their use.
At what age should children use calculators instead of mental or written arithmetic?
This is a good question and one that is at the centre of much controversy. In Britain, a report commissioned by the government discourages the use of calculators in mathematics instruction for children through to the age of eleven. In fact, the final report, in response to widespread criticism, does ameliorate this advice, but still espouses little or no use of calculators until the later years of primary school.
Educators, apart from those teaching maths, appear very reluctant to encourage young children to use calculators, supporting a ‘back to basics’ approach. Strangely, though, computer use is encouraged, which seems rather contradictory. Calculators are always used in professional settings, just as computers are, and there is unlikely to be any assertion that the users are somehow less able because they are not working out figures with a pencil and paper. A strong body of research suggests that using pencil-and-paper methods alongside teaching the appropriate use of a calculator, is the most effective way to teach maths to children of all ages. After all, a child must know how to work out a problem or a function before it can be undertaken on a calculator, which means that the calculator is just a tool to gain a result rather than a replacement for knowledge. It’s also a good tool for checking mental arithmetic or pencil-and-paper work for accuracy.
If calculators are used by your child’s school as part of maths study, you are within your rights to question the theory behind their use, and when they should be used. But rest assured that most research points to the idea that calculators can enhance an understanding of maths rather than undermine it.
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