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A good friend of mine was in the same situation with his son. A shy quiet kid that didn't cause trouble. Perfect target for bullies. My buddy did turn his son loose on the bully after months of trying to get something done. His son, like yours, has been taking martial arts for years. He didn't hurt the other kid, just very quickly showed him enough was enough. His son was suspended and moved to a different school and now has that on his perm record. Nothing happened to the bully.
What my friend failed to do was document anything. He had visited the school multiple times but had not formally charged the bully or his parents. He also did not seek help past the principal of that school. He had no proof other than his word. No one at the school would get involved even though they all really liked his son. It is a sad commentary that these things aren't dealt with better. We are having more and more Coloumbine-like incidents every year. Good luck! Jeff- |
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At this stage the other kid is "salvageable" and can have a good life. He is being taught some poor behavior at home, but with the right intervention by others he can have a better life. |
Hey Eric, sorry to hear about this problem.
As much as I would LOVE for your son to kick this kid's ass up and down the street, he'll probably be the only one that gets into trouble. It's sad but true. If I were you, I would go see the highest person in charge and let them know that you are not going to stand for this to happen any more. Let them be fully aware that you are going to lawyer up and let them know that. Then, I would speak to an attorney and tell him your side of the story and see what he says and take it from there. GOOD LUCK with everything buddy. |
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I went over the principals head yesterday, right to his direct boss. If that fails I have the number for the district supervisor, and the state office that oversees them. If need be I will just keep climbing that ladder. as far as I need to and make it as public as possible. I will not wait for an incident of serious injury (or any injury again) at this point. I am done waiting for them to respond. |
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The first step is the lawyer, and then making it VERY public. My first priority is my son. But I did also make it very clear that I know they have a legal obligation to help the other kid too. I guess I am working on his behalf too. He's 5. He was taught this crap at home and needs something done. That is not something I will do directly but I will sure pressure the school into doing something about it. When I spoke to the district office and the supervisor over the school principal he was pissed about the whole thing. He did not say anything out of step, but I could hear it in his voice. He is now aware of everything including a possible lawsuit. That is something they just do not want. I am VERY surprised that they have not at least suspended the other kid yet. I just don't get that. The teacher has made the principal very aware of all of it, I did too. I spoke directly to him. But his lack of action is sickening to me. Now he will have no choice but to act. |
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Man I though alot about this subject last night after I read this whole thing...and what I would do. Tough situation to be in...
Yes, you should feel some sympathy for the other kid...he probably has a crappy home life etc etc, but he's not your problem. You wont be able to change that his parents or his home life. Your priority is your son. Hopefully your actions will start the ball rolling to check on the home life of this kid, but its still not your problem. Despite everyone wishes and high goals, schools cant solve these problems. Schools cant solve crappy parents and a crappy home life. They have hundreds of kids to deal with and minimal resources. I think alot of crappy parents just use the school as a daycare to babysit the kids and expect them to "raise them" and teach them whats "right and wrong". If you dont have good parents, that rarely happens. I'm still of the same opinion....go through the right channels...document everything up the ying yang. I'd tell the school and all the admin that if this continues that you have given your son the "green light" to beat the tar out of this kid. Either they take care of it or your son will be forced to defend himself, end of story. If you have everything documented and the whole school system is aware of whats going on, your son should be fine if he has to do whats necessary. They have been warned and its all in writing. Moving this kid to another class wont change anything if this kid is gunning for your son. You mentioned that some of the incidents have taken place on the playground, in the lunchroom etc etc. At best it will make the kid target some other poor kid in the other class and probably still your son during the "open season" parts of school. Yes it would suck that you may have to let your son use violence to solve a problem at 5 years old, but if you do the right thing, talk to him in depth about doing things the right way....trying to walk away, let it go, the kid has problems etc etc...... but sometimes you have to stand up for yourself. Its a good lesson to not let other people push you around....both emotionally and physically. |
Thanks Ned. I agree that the other kid is not my problem, but it is a legal responsibility of the school to do something including calling in state agencies to help him.
And you are right in that if it's not my son, it will be someone elses down the road. This kids location in the school does not matter, it is his personal issues that are the problem. When all else fails I will green light my son to do what is needed to put a stop to it. Until then, gotta keep my head on straight. |
Just a little add-on to my earlier post, the school made a big deal about my buddy's son being "trained to fight". That was the issue that got him black listed. None of the earlier stuff mattered, they zeroed in on the martial arts part and the good kid became the out of control monster. Just FYI.
Jeff- |
The problem is if your son does not at least knock him on his ass, he will be the sissy who's daddy handled it for him. We did that one time and it got really bad for my middle son. After we had him moved from the class he was getting screwed with from everyone. Lucky for us we were moving anyway to a better school district.
When all 3 boys went to the new school, of coarse someone wants to try you. They all had their moments and handled things at the bus stop. One even got his ass kicked by the bully, black eye, but even the bully respected him for standing up for his self, they became friends, and no more problems, ever. All our problems happened in elementary and middle school when the kids are young, small and cannot do much damage. Come High school when these guys can really hurt one another, we had ZERO issues which is good because non of my boys were exactly big tough guys, but none are pussies either. Not one of my kids was in a fight ever after early middle school and moving to the new schools. I attribute that to standing up for themselves early and carrying themselves with confidence. Now with that said that was at least 12 years ago and things have probably tighten up even more since then as far as punishment for standing up for yourself. But reputation in school is everything. |
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