Bad children are disciplined.How does discipline relate to the context of this thread?
Since you have decided a child is bad for inviting a friend at school to his happy birthday party, then what discipline should be administered to that bad child?
Bad children are disciplined.How does discipline relate to the context of this thread?
Bad children are disciplined.
Since you have decided a child is bad for inviting a friend at school to his happy birthday party, then what discipline should be administered to that bad child?
That's gonna hurt his feelings.Sit in the corner for 30 minutes. And no dessert with dinner.
Do you see what this is doing?
It's telling little children that they are bad if they [now pay close attention] invite a friend at school to their happy birthday party [let that sink in real good].
Why on earth would you allow anyone to demonize little children for that ?
Why would you give in to that kind of insanity?
That's gonna hurt his feelings.
Bad children are disciplined.
Since you have decided a child is bad for inviting a friend at school to his happy birthday party, then what discipline should be administered to that bad child?
So the kid realizes he has feelings.
DUH
I'm not demonizing anybody.
It's just not the school's job to facilitate party planning.
I'd say even if the kid's going to invite every student in his class, don't do it in school. What's the big deal about having the kid call his friends up? Or teaching him how to mail invitations?
Then stop the madness of telling children they are bad if they do so.I don't think the kid's bad.
A school should have no authority at all to tell a child how many of his school friends he has to invite, or how they are invited.
Then stop the madness of telling children they are bad if they do so.
Cause that is exactly what this school is doing.
Maybe????Maybe. :idunno:
It isn't about 'hurt feelings' either, as every child's desire is to invite their personal friends to their own happy birthday party.But I don't see the relevance since this isn't about discipline.
There is absolutely NOTHING wrong or bad about only inviting your close personal good friends to your party.
It's not a misuse to invite only your close personal good friends to your happy birthday party at a school.Wait. They are?
I thought they were saying it's "bad" to misuse school time as party invitation time.
Agreed.I 100% agree. And there's nothing wrong with not using school time to do it.
Do you agree?
It isn't about 'hurt feelings' either, as every child's desire is to invite their personal friends to their own happy birthday party.
I mean, it's not good logic to expect anything other than wanting to invite only their own personal good friends to their party.
Unless every child in the school class is a personal good friend, then there is no sound reason to invite them all for a child's personal happy birthday party.
There is absolutely NOTHING wrong or bad about only inviting your close personal good friends to your party.
From the neighborhood, or school, or church, etc.
NOTHING wrong with it.
And reasonable folks from the neighborhood, school, church, etc. know this.
If it's not wrong, then why tell them it's wrong?I agree. But they do have the authority to say not to invite them during school.
If it's not wrong, then why tell them it's wrong?
Of course they are going to talk about it.All the school wants you to do is avoid classroom invitations to prevent kids from feeling left out. It's a nice sentiment but I question how practical it is, as news of a party will probably get out somehow and kids will still know they weren't invited.
What are they going to do next?
Stop having show and tell about what you did over the weekend or summer vacation, because some kid might feel 'hurt' that he didn't get to go to Disney Land over the summer?
Stop telling in school what you got for Christmas because some kid might feel hurt that he didn't get what you got?
Stop telling in school that your pee-wee baseball team won the championship, because some kid might feel hurt that his team didn't?