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- Newsgroups: misc.kids
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!decwrl!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!linac!att!cbnewsi!glm
- From: glm@cbnewsi.cb.att.com (georgia.l.madden)
- Subject: Re: Help! - comforting bitee...
- Organization: AT&T
- Distribution: il
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 15:54:35 GMT
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.155435.11632@cbnewsi.cb.att.com>
- Summary: Biting
- References: <1993Jan25.171151.29044@clpd.kodak.com> <C1FI8K.9z5@SSD.intel.com>
- Lines: 84
-
- In article <C1FI8K.9z5@SSD.intel.com>, wang@ssd.intel.com (Wen-Lin Wang) writes:
- > My email bounced, so here it is...
- >
- > I know that quite a few people will assure you that biting is common and will
- > go away eventually. Well, it will go away and maybe it's common too, but I
- > don't think it's acceptable. It creates heartache for parents, not
- > mentioning possible infections if skin breaks.
- >
- > My daughter was bitten once with small skin breaks. At the time the teachers
- > payed a lot of attention on her so she didn't think much about it. Later on
- > she would tell me who bit her. I taught her that if any kid was about to bite
- > her, she should "push that child away and say loudly 'NO BITING', and call the
- > teacher for help". We practiced this couple of times and she appeared happy
- > with some confidence that she can control the situation.
- >
- > Since I knew the biter had a biting history, we talked to the head teacher
- > and heard about their policy of dealing with this situation. Her teacher
- > even guaranteed that this won't happen again. Since then, my daughter
- > advanced to the next group and we haven't heard any more such incident, yet.
- >
- > I don't know talking to the director will help that much. I think you need to
- > work with the teacher(s) who are directly responsible with these children.
- > Often the biting episode happens when the teachers are too busy and the
- > children are left unattended. How did the teachers handle these situation?
- > How was the biter and bitee treated?
- >
- > If the teachers are really out of means of handling this biter, then find
- > out if there is a policy of removing the 'uncurable biter' from the school.
- > I believe that as a parent and paying customer, I have the right to air my
- > concern about the safety and wellbeing of my own child. Of course, I am
- > always willing to work with the school to find an acceptable solution for
- > all who are concerned.
- >
- > In my child's daycare, 1 year old and two year olds are sub-grouped in a large
- > classroom with partitions. 1 year old stay in one partition, 2 - 2.5 stay in
- > another and 2.5+ stay in one. They are segregated but can observe each
- > other. When my child got bitten, she was in the middle partition. A month
- > later she advanced to the 2.5+ group, and the biter stayed in the middle group.
- > If your child's daycare has similar arrangement, they may be willing to
- > adjust his environment. It turned out the biter in my child's daycare bit
- > quite a few other kids too, the other kids all since 'advanced'.
- >
- > Good luck.
- >
- > Wen-lin
- >
- >
- > --
-
- I have been reading these biting articles with much interest. I have a 9
- year old daughter who was bitten many times and a 2 year old son who was a
- biter. I, too, was very smug when my daughter was being biten (what kind of
- parents could be raising a child to bite, how horrible, etc.). Well, I am
- not smug anymore, as I now realize ANYONE's child can be a biter. It is
- not as if the parents are at home teaching the child to bite. It is that
- particular child's form of frustration -- no different than kicking, hitting,
- etc. (none of these behaviors are acceptable!)
-
- Perhaps you could be a little more understanding to the parents of the biter
- as well. We tried everything we could to stop him (including my pediatrician's
- sure fire method -- tabasco sauce --). Alot of kids bite just before they
- are getting ready to verbalize their frustrations, and basically no matter
- what we tried, he did not stop biting until he was able to talk. Luckily,
- he never bit hard enough to break any skin, but because of parents much like
- yourself he was kicked out of his daycare. It was no more his fault that
- he was biting than it was your fault as parents that your kid would let
- him bite! Neither child was at an age where they yet understood all of
- their actions. I hope that your next child is a biter; please let us
- know how your perfect parenting techniques fare.
-
- I'm sorry if this sounds nasty; but believe me NOBODY is understanding
- about this situation (although every health professional I talked to
- was quick to say how rampant this actually is). The only difference is
- that in this day and age our children have to be in daycares, when I was
- growing up I could very well have been biting my sibling, but no one was
- going to kick me out! In my opinion, it is the daycare personnel that
- is to blame (if they were really watching the children properly, this
- would not happen). Even though he has grown out of this phase, it still
- makes me angry when people who have no first-hand experience with biters
- seem to think their perfect children could never do this. For what is
- is worth, even when my daughter was the bitee, I never was unreasonable
- enough to get the biter kicked out of daycare. You cannot fight all
- of your kid's battles for them.
-
-