Props(?) to Ty Cobb for making this list. His transgressions were 100 years ago, any witnesses are no longer alive, and there is little video of him to judge. Yet he still comes to mind when you think of "baseball villain."Funny stuff in this article
Five Most Controversial Players in MLB History - Sports Management Degree Guide
Baseball is America’s favorite pastime; but that doesn’t make the sport exempt from controversy. The MLB franchise has been home to some of the most controversial players in history and some of the most [...]www.sports-management-degrees.com
Took a moment to look up some history on Ty Cobb here's a little read I found...Props(?) to Ty Cobb for making this list. His transgressions were 100 years ago, any witnesses are no longer alive, and there is little video of him to judge. Yet he still comes to mind when you think of "baseball villain."
Trust me, if the parent(s) make(s) enough of a stink to administration, they will get their kid (or the other kids) moved to a different classroom/teacher (or academic team, if in middle school). I wish that weren't the case. A few years ago, in seventh-grade, the guidance counselor came to us with a list of 20+ kids out of about 220 seventh-graders who could NOT be in the same classes together. We champion the benefits of social-emotional learning, but only pay lip service to the kids developing conflict resolution skills.What happens if your daughter doesn't like other kids in their classrooms? That's going to be difficult. Every classroom different kids what you going to do? Definitely think there's value in learning to realize not everybody is going to be your friend you have to learn to manage through situations. This is learning life!
This is very true and in reality all you really need to do to solve this is do less...adults need to stop hovering.but only pay lip service to the kids developing conflict resolution skills.
If this was in response to my post (there is a reply button, bottom right) I wasn't really talking about the bullying situation (with regards to conflict resolution) although to me the face-to-face bullying stuff is much less of an issue than the online bullying crap that we didn't have to deal with growing up (or at least I didn't). I was more talking about letting kids work through arguments on the playground, etcThere's a difference between conflict resolution and just taking it though. Telling a kid to just suck it up is still coddling, it's just coddling the more aggressive/mean/bullying kids.
yes I didn't reply directly because it wasn't really directed at anyone, just the ongoing shift of the conversation to disagreements outside the softball field. Especially ones like classrooms where it's mostly not a choice to be there.If this was in response to my post (there is a reply button, bottom right) I wasn't really talking about the bullying situation (with regards to conflict resolution) although to me the face-to-face bullying stuff is much less of an issue than the online bullying crap that we didn't have to deal with growing up (or at least I didn't). I was more talking about letting kids work through arguments on the playground, etc
I don't disagree. In the situation I mentioned before with my DD, the PITA was the head coach's kid and he had been made aware numerous times that his kid was a PITA..If my DD wasn't enjoying herself we would have just left before we did.I just worry that advice to just take it, don't let it bother you, suck it up, etc etc leads to the kid that's struggling disliking or disengaging from something they otherwise would've liked. Whether it's softball or math.