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Forum -> Chinuch, Education & Schooling
9 year old DS school resistance



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amother
OP  


 

Post Sun, Dec 15 2024, 5:05 pm
My 9 year old DS has been giving us a hard time about going to school recently. Not every day but it's becoming a pattern.
And then he won't get dressed and he'll miss his carpool, and then I'll have to bring him to school, late, after I bring my 6 year old dd.

He doesn't have a lot to say about it. Just "he doesn't want to go", "he hates school" etc...
He likes his teachers, he has friends B"H, he's not having a hard time with the material B"H.

I spoke to his Rebbe on thursday and his Rebbe spoke to him. Basically he told Rebbe that school is just too long. (8:30-4:00).
Rebbe suggested I bring him late once a week or pick him up early once a week and that might motivate him to go nicely the rest of the week.

I'm not sure I love that idea, although I appreciate very much the flexibility that he offered me.

I'm just not sure it's the best thing for my son.

Basically, my son is very much in his own head. He loves learning the things he's interested in - police stuff, police vehicles, countries around the world. My feeling is that he's in his own head, and he spends the whole day at school waiting to get home so he could do the things he's interested in.

So I'm not sure that an extra hour home once a week is the right solution.


I hope wise women here will be able to give me ideas.

Thank you
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naomi2




 
 
    
 

Post Sun, Dec 15 2024, 6:48 pm
I think the rebbe has a good idea. I gave my son days off if he asked in advance, never if he asked in the morning. Sometimes it was even once a month. If your kid is refusing to go to school, something is not working for him.
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amother
Cream


 

Post Sun, Dec 15 2024, 10:45 pm
Is he academically advanced? It is very hard to be bored all day, especially for children who like learning. I used to read under my desk in class (a bit older) when I really couldn't handle it.
If that is the issue the Rebbi's suggestion could work. Take him out of his usual environment and give the kid a chance to become an expert in his area of interest. I dont love the idea of making him different, so I might first providing intellectual stimulation in addition to school. However I recognize that that will not make as much of a difference.
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amother
  OP  


 

Post Mon, Dec 16 2024, 11:50 pm
Thanks for the input.
He is academically advanced on the one hand BH, but on the other hand, everything that he’s learning is new to him. It’s not like he’s learning stuff he already learned.
It’s just that his own interests, interest him more.
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amother
Poinsettia


 

Post Yesterday at 12:22 am
My situation is not exactly like yours, but my son only goes half a day right now. It's super inconvenient for me, but we are doing what's best for him. Hopefully it will change soon.

Just being encouraging for you to be creative and embrace thinking outside the box. Every kid is different and it doesn't make sense that every kid at age 9 should sit in a classroom until 4 or later.
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amother
Quince


 

Post Yesterday at 12:25 am
No advice but I do like the Rebbes idea.
Maybe make it work in your favor, if he goes nicely every day then once every week or 2 you’ll take him later or maybe once a month he can have a Mommy & me date wether during school hours or after hours.
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amother
Mauve  


 

Post Yesterday at 12:49 am
Honestly? you'll hate me for this but I would have him evaluated for ADD.
For background, I work in a boys cheider and I have 6 sons of my own.
The combination of living in his own head and finding the school day too long are pretty strong signs.
3rd grade is generally where ADD crops up as a problem as the timespan expected for concentration is longer and the school day is more sitting focused and less active.
Take into account that if this is the problem, it will only get worse with time as the demands are more as they go up through the school. It's worth treating now before it gets to be an emotional/discipline problem.
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monseymom161




 
 
    
 

Post Yesterday at 10:28 am
We do contests. If they go to school really nicely for a month then we'll do a trip to the ice cream store, or whatever...
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amother
  OP  


 

Post Today at 1:27 am
amother Mauve wrote:
Honestly? you'll hate me for this but I would have him evaluated for ADD.
For background, I work in a boys cheider and I have 6 sons of my own.
The combination of living in his own head and finding the school day too long are pretty strong signs.
3rd grade is generally where ADD crops up as a problem as the timespan expected for concentration is longer and the school day is more sitting focused and less active.
Take into account that if this is the problem, it will only get worse with time as the demands are more as they go up through the school. It's worth treating now before it gets to be an emotional/discipline problem.



Hmmm this is food for thought.
You’re saying it could inattentive ADHD? Because he’s not impulsive or hyperactive BH.

Can you tell me more what you mean about becoming an emotional problem?
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amother
  OP


 

Post Today at 1:29 am
Thank you to everyone who responded. I have a lot from you all to think about.
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amother
  Mauve


 

Post Today at 1:35 am
amother OP wrote:
Hmmm this is food for thought.
You’re saying it could inattentive ADHD? Because he’s not impulsive or hyperactive BH.

Can you tell me more what you mean about becoming an emotional problem?


Yes, inattentive. An attention deficit disorder rather than hyperactive.

A child who feels that they ought to be able to succeed and it's not quite happening, who feels they ought to be able to concentrate and they can't, who is used to succeeding and now is finding it harder, builds up a high frustration level and a low self image. Seeing as most of his day is in school, it could be that now he is a bright kid and it doesn't matter if he spaces out a lot of the time, he still gets good grades. As the pace of learning picks up, the teacher does less repetition and review, he will find it harder if he spaces out. Level of success begins to go down, self doubt and recrimination set in. Then it becomes an emotional problem which is way harder to deal with.
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