Ask Me Help Desk

Ask Me Help Desk (https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/forum.php)
-   Parenting (https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/forumdisplay.php?f=248)
-   -   How to make a second grader be more responsible? (https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/showthread.php?t=795509)

  • Jun 29, 2014, 10:29 PM
    hilow79
    How to make a second grader be more responsible?
    My daughter goes to second grade and she keeps losing her stuff. She loses her eraser almost everyday and some times she forgets her lunch bag too. This might sound silly to some, but it is not to me. I want her to take responsibility for her actions. I have tried talking to her, telling her how hard it is for me to provide it all for her. I have asked her to sit in the "sorry chair." But nothing works. How do I make her give importance to keep things safe?
  • Jun 29, 2014, 10:47 PM
    joypulv
    Hi there, Mom! (Late at night here and I can't sleep.)
    All I can say is that I was like your daughter in that I was constantly breaking my Thermos bottle, an expensive item in the 50s, and schools didn't even have lunchrooms then. My mother yelled and told me about costs and I was oblivious. Of course I had to go without whatever I broke for a while, and that probably taught me more than any explanations or punishments did. She wasn't into any 'nice' ways of teaching, but I wonder if maybe there are some...
    How about getting some fabric marker pens and helping her color some animals and her name on her bag, and making a little pouch out of cloth for her eraser? It could have a long string for a strap and it could be like a little purse.
    You could also connect the responsibility to a new privilege. Something you tell her she 'will be old enough to have or do' when she 'learns to be careful of the things you have to buy.' I can't think of anything for a second grader right now.
  • Jun 29, 2014, 11:52 PM
    hilow79
    Hi joy! So moms are the same in 50's and now :) And for your writing her name on the bag suggestion... did that too, but she forgets to bring the bag home. She puts on her backpack and fails to take the lunch bag with her when she leaves her classroom. So the problem here is not just her forgetfulness. I love your little purse for the eraser idea! Will try it :) thanks for replying in the middle of the night.
  • Jun 30, 2014, 03:49 AM
    DoulaLC
    Hi hilow79,

    Is this in preparation for next school year or is she attending a year round school or summer program? The "eraser purse" is a fun idea. Otherwise, is it possible for her to keep a couple of erasers at home and one at school?

    Some of the students will use a clip to attach their lunch bag to their bag pack (often works because kids like to play with the clips and think it's fun to use... she could even clip her "eraser purse" to it as well), some will get in the habit of putting their lunch bag in their backpack after lunch. Are lunch bags/boxes kept in a specific location in the classroom... such as a shelf with the backpacks? (although I've had kids forget them even then!) I ended up making a simple checklist poster for students... homework folder, agenda, lunchbox, backpack.

    Have you spoken to the teacher about making a general reminder to students at dismissal? A big part of the primary grades is learning responsibility.

    Along the reward idea, it could be something as simple as earning stickers for a second grader, with perhaps something a little bigger after earning a certain number of stickers.
  • Jun 30, 2014, 11:02 PM
    hilow79
    Hi DoulaLC

    My daughter has been going to school/daycare since she was two and a half. This losing stuff started last year when she was in first grade.
    The chain idea is great, sounds like fun too. But she has to keep her backpack next to her by the desk and the lunch bag goes to a corner of the classroom. This might work still as the hanging chain might remind her to get the lunch bag.
    The next time I go for the PT meeting I will talk to the teacher about this. I guess that might help too.
    The sticker idea sounds

    The sticker reward way is also cool :)
  • Jul 3, 2014, 11:28 AM
    aliseaodo
    I know this is a few days old - but you could also just use a regular paper sack lunch bag like the old days. It could just be thrown away every day after lunch. (This doesn't really help with building responsibility, I know, but I would assume that she would not want to use it, and that would be a good time to say, well, when you show you can be responsible with your eraser you can try using your lunch bag again.)
  • Jul 4, 2014, 02:48 AM
    hilow79
    Thanks aliseodo :)

  • All times are GMT -7. The time now is 08:16 AM.