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  #1  
Old 03-31-2010, 03:33 PM
knight_shadow knight_shadow is offline
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Originally Posted by Alumiyum View Post
If a kid goes for a teacher it's hard to know how to respond. If a teacher responds aggressively verbally or physically they'll be crucified. Kids that go that far probably have bigger problems than just being a bully. It would be great if they were all offered help. I know they're not, though.
I know that. My point was that my generation (ha!) never would have never gone after authority figures. We may have fought fellow students, but never an adult.

Fear of mom and dad having to leave work to come pick me up from school kept me from doing it, and most of my friend's were the same way.

ETA: prettyface08 beat me to it
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  #2  
Old 03-31-2010, 03:38 PM
Prettyface08 Prettyface08 is offline
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Originally Posted by knight_shadow View Post
I know that. My point was that my generation (ha!) never would have never gone after authority figures. We may have fought fellow students, but never an adult.

Fear of mom and dad having to leave work to come pick me up from school kept me from doing it, and most of my friend's were the same way.

ETA: prettyface08 beat me to it
Shooooot! I know the game LOL
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  #3  
Old 03-31-2010, 03:41 PM
knight_shadow knight_shadow is offline
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Originally Posted by Prettyface08 View Post
Shooooot! I know the game LOL
Haha!

I wonder if there have been any studies trying to figure out what caused this shift from "us being scared of parents" to "us wanting to fight parents and other adults?" I'd be interested in reading up on that.
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  #4  
Old 03-31-2010, 03:46 PM
Prettyface08 Prettyface08 is offline
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Originally Posted by knight_shadow View Post
Haha!

I wonder if there have been any studies trying to figure out what caused this shift from "us being scared of parents" to "us wanting to fight parents and other adults?" I'd be interested in reading up on that.
I'd love to read those studies! It's crazy how things change, it both frightens and saddens me.
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  #5  
Old 03-31-2010, 03:49 PM
epchick epchick is offline
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Originally Posted by knight_shadow View Post
Haha!

I wonder if there have been any studies trying to figure out what caused this shift from "us being scared of parents" to "us wanting to fight parents and other adults?" I'd be interested in reading up on that.
It's the way people parent now-a-days. In our day, we'd get our asses handed to us by our parents for even looking @ the teacher cross-eyed. Now, parents are encouraging their children to talk back to the teacher if the child feels like it.

I had a 6th grader tell me that he wasn't going to do any effin thing I said because his mom said if a teacher "doesn't give respect" don't give any back. All I asked him to do was stop playing his instrument and do the worksheet he was assigned.

My mom was yelled at by a parent for saying 'stupid' in class. She never directed the comment to the student, instead she said something (to the entire class) like "i don't care if you don't like this assignment or think it's stupid."

Parents need to get back into the habit of whooping their kids butts for getting out of line.
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  #6  
Old 03-31-2010, 03:52 PM
knight_shadow knight_shadow is offline
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Originally Posted by epchick View Post
It's the way people parent now-a-days. In our day, we'd get our asses handed to us by our parents for even looking @ the teacher cross-eyed. Now, parents are encouraging their children to talk back to the teacher if the child feels like it.

I had a 6th grader tell me that he wasn't going to do any effin thing I said because his mom said if a teacher "doesn't give respect" don't give any back. All I asked him to do was stop playing his instrument and do the worksheet he was assigned.

My mom was yelled at by a parent for saying 'stupid' in class. She never directed the comment to the student, instead she said something (to the entire class) like "i don't care if you don't like this assignment or think it's stupid."

Parents need to get back into the habit of whooping their kids butts for getting out of line.
My parents encouraged me to stand up for myself (and clearly, I have no problems doing that haha), but also made sure my sisters and I knew to respect our elders/authority figures. If I felt that someone was out of line, there are better ways to address the issues.

"I'm curious to know why you want me to finish this assignment when I completed it already"

works better than

"Bitch, I'm not doing this shit. I did it already! Kiss my ass!"

ETA: And, yea, beat your kids' asses from time to time.
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  #7  
Old 03-31-2010, 03:58 PM
Prettyface08 Prettyface08 is offline
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Originally Posted by knight_shadow View Post
My parents encouraged me to stand up for myself (and clearly, I have no problems doing that haha), but also made sure my sisters and I knew to respect our elders/authority figures. If I felt that someone was out of line, there are better ways to address the issues.

"I'm curious to know why you want me to finish this assignment when I completed it already"

works better than

"Bitch, I'm not doing this shit. I did it already! Kiss my ass!"

ETA: And, yea, beat your kids' asses from time to time.
LOL!! Wait! No. But seriously, that's how they talk to teachers nowadays. I love that my mommy was one of those parents who had NO problem asking to have a meeting with me, her, the principal and the teacher I was having an issue with. I'd better NOT try to handle it on my own.
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  #8  
Old 03-31-2010, 04:01 PM
knight_shadow knight_shadow is offline
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Originally Posted by Prettyface08 View Post
LOL!! Wait! No. But seriously, that's how they talk to teachers nowadays. I love that my mommy was one of those parents who had NO problem asking to have a meeting with me, her, the principal and the teacher I was having issue with. I'd better NOT try to handle it my self.
My mom was the same way. If there were problems, she wouldn't hesitate to call the teacher and administrators (some of which weren't even involved lol) to get to the root of the issue.

Then I had to deal with "Wait til I tell your daddy."

To this day, I will second guess my decisions if I'm afraid mom and dad are gonna pop up and say something about said decisions.
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  #9  
Old 03-31-2010, 04:04 PM
DrPhil DrPhil is offline
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OK...

...so going with the logic of "these crazy kids are out of their damn minds these days," doesn't that potentially apply to both the bullies and those who are being bullied?

I don't care how much everyone is their parents' bundles of joy, parents never really know what their kids are doing when they are at school. There are some kids who are angels most of the time, but many kids (even the straight A students who are uber religious) have outlets where they unleash their badassness.

With that said, the bullies' parents are probably shocked by their behaviors and the the bullied's parents are probably clueless as to what their child may or may not have done to contribute to the bullying. Not every kid contributes to his/her bullying, but some kids do. So, blame the parents and adults, perhaps partially blame the kids at times--but, definitely examine this further to get a more complete picture of what's going on in these kids' lives.
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  #10  
Old 03-31-2010, 03:53 PM
Prettyface08 Prettyface08 is offline
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Originally Posted by epchick View Post
It's the way people parent now-a-days. In our day, we'd get our asses handed to us by our parents for even looking @ the teacher cross-eyed. Now, parents are encouraging their children to talk back to the teacher if the child feels like it.

I had a 6th grader tell me that he wasn't going to do any effin thing I said because his mom said if a teacher "doesn't give respect" don't give any back. All I asked him to do was stop playing his instrument and do the worksheet he was assigned.

My mom was yelled at by a parent for saying 'stupid' in class. She never directed the comment to the student, instead she said something (to the entire class) like "i don't care if you don't like this assignment or think it's stupid."

Parents need to get back into the habit of whooping their kids butts for getting out of line.
I'm Prettyface08 and I approve this message!
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  #11  
Old 03-31-2010, 03:59 PM
Munchkin03 Munchkin03 is offline
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Originally Posted by knight_shadow View Post
Haha!

I wonder if there have been any studies trying to figure out what caused this shift from "us being scared of parents" to "us wanting to fight parents and other adults?" I'd be interested in reading up on that.
Back in graduate school, I had a conversation with one of my friends about this very topic. She had gone to some conference about how parenting shifted somewhere around the early to mid 80s. It used to be that people just had kids. They had them when they were young, without really really trying and if they couldn't have kids, they adopted (back when it was easy to do so) or they just didn't have kids.

Around the early 80s, it was a much bigger deal to have kids, for middle class families at least. For the first time, mainstream folks timed their careers around the best time to start a family. If it wasn't very easy, they spent thousands of dollars on difficult adoptions or reproductive technologies. Even if it was easy to have a kid, the safety of that baby became the center of their lives. This was around the time that "crib death," something that a lot of women experienced before, got the name SIDS. Remember the "Baby on Board" signs? Car seats weren't standard until around that time. In other words, people became so proud of their investment and creation that the kid could do no wrong.
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  #12  
Old 03-31-2010, 04:03 PM
knight_shadow knight_shadow is offline
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Originally Posted by Munchkin03 View Post
Back in graduate school, I had a conversation with one of my friends about this very topic. She had gone to some conference about how parenting shifted somewhere around the early to mid 80s. It used to be that people just had kids. They had them when they were young, without really really trying and if they couldn't have kids, they adopted (back when it was easy to do so) or they just didn't have kids.

Around the early 80s, it was a much bigger deal to have kids, for middle class families at least. For the first time, mainstream folks timed their careers around the best time to start a family. If it wasn't very easy, they spent thousands of dollars on difficult adoptions or reproductive technologies. Even if it was easy to have a kid, the safety of that baby became the center of their lives. This was around the time that "crib death," something that a lot of women experienced before, got the name SIDS. Remember the "Baby on Board" signs? Car seats weren't standard until around that time. In other words, people became so proud of their investment and creation that the kid could do no wrong.
That makes sense.

But I was born in 84 and my parents were very invested in their careers. That didn't cut into their parenting, though, and they didn't think my sisters and I could do no wrong.

I know that my bubble isn't representative of the entire population, but from what I can tell, a lot of the problems have come up with these 90s babies.
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  #13  
Old 03-31-2010, 10:22 PM
Ch2tf Ch2tf is offline
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Originally Posted by knight_shadow View Post
That makes sense.

But I was born in 84 and my parents were very invested in their careers. That didn't cut into their parenting, though, and they didn't think my sisters and I could do no wrong.

I know that my bubble isn't representative of the entire population, but from what I can tell, a lot of the problems have come up with these 90s babies.
Same here, I was born in 81 and both my parents worked, but still took the time to parent, and they damn sure didn't think I could do no wrong. If anything more "blame" was placed on me than deserved with respect to school issues. I remember in 7th grade, I was falsely accused of making a bullying statement about the student. Well good ol' Mr. Kelly told my parents and lo and behold I was on punishment for MONTHS!! My parents weren't even trying to here that I actually didn't do it.
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  #14  
Old 03-31-2010, 04:05 PM
epchick epchick is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by knight_shadow View Post

"Bitch, I'm not doing this shit. I did it already! Kiss my ass!"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Prettyface08 View Post
LOL!! Wait! No. But seriously, that's how they talk to teachers nowadays
YEP!

I had a 3rd grader, mind you--he was 8 years old, tell me exactly what you typed out (minus the 'bitch' part cause I woulda whooped his ass myself) because the teacher assigned the class math problems they already did.

The others said it nicely. They didn't have to do the work. I made him do them again, along with writing out the question in its entirety plus answer choices (if there were any) and he had to draw out the problem and show how he did it. He was pissed and had a baaad attitude, but trust me when I said my bad attitude was much worse than his.
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  #15  
Old 04-01-2010, 08:37 AM
Prettyface08 Prettyface08 is offline
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Originally Posted by epchick View Post
YEP!

I had a 3rd grader, mind you--he was 8 years old, tell me exactly what you typed out (minus the 'bitch' part cause I woulda whooped his ass myself) because the teacher assigned the class math problems they already did.

The others said it nicely. They didn't have to do the work. I made him do them again, along with writing out the question in its entirety plus answer choices (if there were any) and he had to draw out the problem and show how he did it. He was pissed and had a baaad attitude, but trust me when I said my bad attitude was much worse than his.
My kind of teacher! LOL
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