Question:
Is it ok to put a 13 year old girl in timeout?
2012-12-09 16:54:36 UTC
Yes I know I have asked this question several times but I need a good answer but I am NOT A PARENT I work in a summer program called Girls Inc. and I have this girl names Karlie that will not listen to me like AT ALL and she has to argue with every word out of my mouth and has an attitude with every word out of her mouth and she decides not to listen like when she is in the main room or office when she is not supposed to be I tell her to go back to the gym but she argues so I hold up 5 fingers and count down and she still doesn't listen and even when I do tell her to go to timeout she just argues and gets out of it and she is 13 so I don't know what I can do the only thing us teachers can do is either put her in timeout, write her up, or take her to my/her boss pattie then she decides a punishment and I can assign punishments to so what should I do I need tons of answers and resolutions and keep in mind I AM NIT A PARENT I am a Summer program teacher
Eight answers:
rolling_thunder
2012-12-09 20:49:21 UTC
I honestly don't think punishment will work very well the majority of the time. Can you give her a task? Have her help set up for the next activity, help clean something etc. Not as a punishment but something to do. Keeping her busy and occupied should shut her up. Also give her choices- she can either go to the gym with the rest of the group or she can do some task for you. Its her choice about what she wants to do but those are her only options. Praise positive behavior ignore negative. Don't argue with her. Just ignore her tell her she has two minutes to make a decision and walk away. If she hasn't made a choice then I would write her up.



I work with kids. I teach kids karate classes and when I have a kid who is acting up I normally have them become my helper and that stops a lot of bad behavior.
DishclothDiaries
2012-12-09 17:16:03 UTC
I think you've already answered your own question. You said the only things you are allowed to do is time out, write her up, or take her to Pattie. If timeouts aren't working, write her up. If that doesn't work, take her to Pattie. If that doesn't help, talk to your boss when the child is not there and ask if she can arrange a parent/teacher conference. But don't get your hopes up, oftentimes the parent can't be bothered with what their child is or is not doing in school. They see it as your problem. It's just a sad fact these days. That's why I too got out of the field. Good luck!!
silman
2016-10-15 09:27:56 UTC
At 13 years previous she is in basic terms no longer going to income on an afternoon vacation. i might want to point a mirrored image time. a gap set up contained in the summer time software room the position uncooperative little ones can bypass to sit back off, and give some theory to what they have been doing. it will be a snug section with cushions, blankets, etc. each and each newborn would have a laptop that they could use to mirror. it is a private laptop which will be shared in the journey that they desire. After the youngster has calmed themselves, then the instructor and newborn can communicate about the incident and the way it will be prevented contained in the destiny. encourage her to precise her thoughts in an perfect way, rather of with an concepts-set or by utilising no longer listening.
hillbilly
2012-12-09 17:00:29 UTC
This is one reason I got out of the education field. It was after taking a student like this one out for corporal punishment was banned that we couldn't control them, so I quit. Good day.
2012-12-13 14:36:59 UTC
Yes, thats fine.
Marie S Zachary
2012-12-10 16:21:10 UTC
Reward good behavior
Pls
2012-12-10 07:48:34 UTC
yes; it is ok. you are a teacher, therefore you should be able to discipline her/other children to a limit if they will not listen to you.
?
2012-12-11 12:46:58 UTC
Yes it is, but it really doesn't work at that age.


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