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First parent teacher conference pre-k can i bring him with me?

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First parent teacher conference pre-k can i bring him with me?

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  1. Yes.


  2. hello

    Yes i think the child should be included. At the school I work with the meetings are done on a school day  its parent-teacher-student meetings instead of just parents and teacher.  They encourage the child to attend.  They also allow the child to express their likes and dislikes about classes so that they can help them.

  3. No it is not a good idea for your child to be there 1) He will be bored out of his mind 2) The teacher might have things to say that she doesn't want your son to hear 3) You might have things to say that you don't want your son to hear - get a sitter!

  4. I always take my kids with me,i have never had a problem.

    i know that you don`t have to unless they request it .

    My kids teacher alays have a area set up where the can draw or play.what is really nice because it keeps them bussy

  5. No, This is a time to talk to the teacher and see what they are doing. Unless they have a play area for the kids, it would be hard to watch him and listen to the teacher. Plus it you want to discuss anything and not have him listen in or if the teacher wants to tell you things he needs to work on, he is not listening in. We do not have kids at the meetings.

  6. unless they say student is welcome.......no, you shouldn't.  This is the time the teacher is suppose to be open and honest with you about your child.  You need to be able to focus on what the teacher is telling you....not watching your child and trying to listen.  Go with questions, remember teachers aren't allowed to be honest any more.  They have to put a positive twist on EVERYTHING.  And lets face it........none of our kids are perfect.

  7. You can, but I would advise against it.  The parent is more preoccupied with what the child is getting into and loses focus of the meeting. The teacher has planned long and hard for this time, seeing that it is usually on her time. As a preschool teacher, we've seen your children long enough throughout the day, don't want to see them off the clock.

  8. Check with his school......usually they will have a supervised play area for the kids while the parents and teachers are talking.

  9. I would check with the teacher only because as a teacher I used to have to tell things to the parents I didn't want the child to hear as it might hurt their self esteem, otherwise, I think it is a great idea to always bring the student, but I'd check .

  10. It's important that he's there, even just in the backround.  Usually they're an opportunity for him to show you his class room and what's on the wall.

  11. What you should do is to ask your childs Teacher to see if your child can go to the Conference.  Some schools won't allow it. (I am a Teacher).

  12. Of course. I think the teachers want you to cause your child will usually show you somthing they have been working on especially to present to their parent at conferences! I went to my daughters last week and if i hadn't taken her it would have seemed as though i should have with the things she was showing me that they have done!

  13. jest tell ur son/thouter to ask his/her teacher and ask if u can bring him/her

  14. YOU CAN IF YOU WANT TO.NOT LIKE THE TEACHER IS GOING TO SUSPEND YOU.

  15. If the 'him' is the child, I don't see why not.  I used to bring my daughter to some conferences.  Then if there was a conflict, I had her right there.

  16. No, it's totally inappropriate. The teacher wants your full attention, she doesn't want to deal with child misbehaving. (Which many will do, because that's just what kids do around mom. ) She also may have issues to discuss privately with you. If your child is having a problem he doesn't need to hear you discuss it. It might make him feel bad or it might sabotage your strategy. Unless your teacher gives you the go ahead, definitely find a sitter.

  17. Ask the school first, but I prefer not to take him, just to be free to talk to his teachers if either of you has complains or any comments to be discussed.

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