15 answers

Help!!! Overeager Librarian Ruins My Kindergarteners First Day of School!

I need a little advice Mamas....Monday was my daughters first day of kindergarten. she is 6 years old. She was very excited her first day of school and went happily to her class. When she came home, she was ok....but not great. She said that during library time, they were all looking at books individually. Then, they were supposed to slide the book to a neighbor and look at a new book. My dauther, who is used to a nap at daycare everyday, was tired and so, slid the new book over and stretched out her hands to lay her head down on the desk and rest. The boy she slid her book to threw it on the floor. The teacher blamed her and took away one of her clips...(behavior tools)
She is an honest child and has always owned up to her mistakes. It upset her terribly because the teacher said she was lying. She knows that lying is wrong and she began to cry, totaly lost it. Gave the teacher her other clip and told everyone she was "not ever comming back to this school!"
I have an appointment after school today to talk to the librarian. I am so upset!!! Any advice or assitance in what to say to this clueless woman would be greatly appreciated. The first day of Kindergarten is traumatic enough without having someone treat you unfairly. I don't want my daughter singled out as a troublemaker right from the beginning, but I feel I MUST address this issue.
Thanks in advance for your ideas and support.
S.

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Thanks so much to ALL the Mamas that responded to my plea! Thanks to your good advice and thoughtfull insight, I had a very productive meeting with the librarian. As it turns out, it was HER first day too! :-) I went with an open mind and heart and made a new friend! :-) She did admitt that she is learning too, assured me that she will try to make her more comfortable in class and that things will be handled differently in the future! She also said that she will tell her she's sorry too! As usual, the great advice on Mamasource has saved the day! God Bless All....S.

Featured Answers

S. -

I had a similar issue with my daughter last year. We also had an issue on the first day of school and I thought the same thing I did not want her labled by all the teachers.

My recommendation is to do exactly what you are doing - go and talk to the librarian directly. If you do not feel that you receive resolution than I recommend talking to the principal. We ended up meeting with the principal, counselor, and my daughters teacher last year it was very stressful but we got resolution. I think that it helps for the teachers and administrators to see that you are an interested parent not one who just sits by and lets them do whatever they want. My daughter ended up having a great year!

Good Luck!

More Answers

First, let me say I am so sorry to hear that happened to your daughter. My son just started 1st grade and I can totally relate to your situation. Last year was hell for him. His first two weeks of school he had a little trouble adjusting to the routinne, since it is very different than the routine that they have at his daycare. He got his "color" chaged daily and he got very discouraged and began to get in trouble for just stupid stuff. We had MANY meetings with the teacher and I emailed her daily to check on his progress. It was as if he was marked to be the trouble kid from the beginning and she was constantly getting on to him about things that were not worth it. In the end we saw a counselor and consulted our pediatrician and concluded that the teacher just disliked him and that he was not actually as "bad" as she made it sound. So my advice is stop it now, put your foot down and closely monitor how she is treated from this point on. Ty's kindergarten year was awful because of a teacher and we are now working on making him "like" school again. Dont make the same mistake I did, believe her and defend her or they will walk all over you. Best of Luck to you. God Bless

2 moms found this helpful

Be carful how you address the librarian. Many teachers believe parents do not support them and always take the childs side with out knowing the whole story. Your child will be the one to suffer from you going in up set and talking to the librarian....find out the whole story. Try and place your self in her shoes. All the different children and personalities and thier parents. Good luck. The real world is not fair. This is just a lesson in life. Your daughter will be okey.

1 mom found this helpful

As a former school librarian, this broke my heart! I was always so excited to see my new kindergarteners, and realized what a huge responsibility I had in shaping their views not just about school but about reading and libraries. I am so very sorry for your sweet daughter! When you go in, be calm. Try not to be defensive but ready to work as a team with the librarian to make the school year a happy one. She is already stressed that a new parent wants to meet with her already and will probably be a bit defensive herself. You both will get much farther if you can work together. One more thing-- I know you trust your daughter but there is always a chance that she did put the book on the floor herself and she is not being honest with you-- the librarian may actually have seen her do this-- be prepared for this, too.
Good luck!
A.

S. -

I had a similar issue with my daughter last year. We also had an issue on the first day of school and I thought the same thing I did not want her labled by all the teachers.

My recommendation is to do exactly what you are doing - go and talk to the librarian directly. If you do not feel that you receive resolution than I recommend talking to the principal. We ended up meeting with the principal, counselor, and my daughters teacher last year it was very stressful but we got resolution. I think that it helps for the teachers and administrators to see that you are an interested parent not one who just sits by and lets them do whatever they want. My daughter ended up having a great year!

Good Luck!

Yikes! I would definitely talk to the teacher and librarian. Not as an angry parent but as a concerned one.

I remember when I was in about 3rd grade we were in music class sitting on the floor and I turned around to see a little spider on the girls dress next to me. I jumped up and for that I had to walk to the front of the room IN FRONT OF THE WHOLE CLASS and sign "the blue book" (behavior tool from 1983, lol) I was devestated. It was the first time I had been in trouble and I was quite upset. I was told I should have raised my hand and alerted the teacher that way instead of my instant reaction of jumping up. Still remember that her name was Mrs. Lawrence.

Another time we all had instruments we were supposed to play at a certain time during a song. We were told a million times to be ready to play our part on time.... so I was holding my sandpaper blocks close together to wait for my cue. Someone behind me tapped my shoulder and when I turned around my blocks scraped OUT OF TURN and I had to walk to the front of the class, give up my instrument and sit out the rest of the class. I'm pretty sure those were the only 2 times I got in trouble in elementary school.

Point is........ unfair things are going to happen and I wouldn't get too ruffled that she will be labeled a troublemaker already. Most likely the teacher is trying to ensure that on her first day she is in control of the classroom from wild kids that misbehave. She was probably nervous for the first day of school too! Let the first few weeks play out and see what happens. Keep your eyes and ears open but don't get too upset just yet.

And hey, at least 25 years later they're taking away clips instead of resorting to humiliation tactics. Maybe there is progress after all.... :o)

~ t

Just approach the librarian in a casual manner- no accusations. Tell her your daughter was upset by an incident that happened with her on the very first day of school and you wanted to hear her version, which may be way different than what your daughter told you. Try not to approach the principal unless absolutely necessary. It's always best to try to work it out with the person directly involved.

By the way, is it possible that she accidentally pushed the book to the floor when she was stretching her arms and the teacher misinterpreted it?

About taking the clips:
It was terrible for her to take the clips since she was disciplining the wrong child. However, if the teacher had disciplined the right kid (the boy who threw the book), then I think it would have been appropriate to take his clip. A kid who throws a book on the first day needs to be set straight pretty quickly.

Good luck with your meeting.

Reward clips taken away on the first day. That is not good. They should let the children have time to adapt before the whole reward system. That is to much presure. Explain to them the nap at daycare and maybe they will understand. Also explain that your daughter is not a liar and you want to know what they will do to make her feel more comfortable. If youare not completely satisified with the answers youa re getting. Go to the principal. Make sure they know that you will stand up for your kid.

I taught Kinder before I had my little boy and will give you my opinion. I think there are several things to consider here. First of all, taking a clip away on the very first day of school is a little much. I can understand how that was devastating to your daughter, and for the teacher to accuse her of "lying" - actually using those words - can hurt a more sensitive child. I feel bad for her that this happened. But, let's turn it around and think from the teacher's point of view. It's very possible that she wasn't in a good mood, wasn't having a good day, or just was trying to exert her authority from day 1 to make a point to all the students. I know "not being in a good mood" is no excuse, but everyone has their own issues going on that most of us don't know about - I mean, she could be sick, her husband may have lost a job, etc. etc.

All of that to say, when you meet with her, with it being so early in the school year, I think your best method is to be kind, friendly, but direct and to the point. Listen to her talk, but be firm in your opinions about the situation, explaining how this is her first time at school, how the "lying" statement hurt her feelings, and let her know you'd appreciate it if she would take a more sensitive, but fair approach with your daughter should something happen again. Let your daughter know you met with the teacher, but do not make out to your daughter that the teacher was "bad, wrong, stupid" because that will further skew her view of the entire school setting. I would say that all adults make mistakes and that the teacher was not trying to be mean to her.

Good luck!

Required Fields

Our records show that we already have a Mamapedia or Mamasource account created for you under the email address you entered.

Please enter your Mamapedia or Mamasource password to continue signing in.

Required Fields

, you’re almost done...

Since this is the first time you are logging in to Mamapedia with Facebook Connect, please provide the following information so you can participate in the Mamapedia community.

As a member, you’ll receive optional email newsletters and community updates sent to you from Mamapedia, and your email address will never be shared with third parties.

By clicking "Continue to Mamapedia", I agree to the Mamapedia Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.