Daydreaming 1st-grader needs to learn how to finish his work
By John Rosemond
Q. My first-grade son's teacher says he frequently "zones out" and doesn't finish assignments in class, even simple things like coloring each number on the page a certain color. She says he has a desk full of unfinished papers. I told her to send them home, and that he'd do them and return them to her promptly. Is there anything else you'd suggest?
A. That's exactly what I would do. You go, girl! I would also, however, ask the teacher to not let future unfinished classwork accumulate, but to send it home the day it should have been done.
Then I would tell said son that papers the teacher sends home from this point on will mean not only that he finishes them at home, as soon as he arrives home, but that every assignment sent home means he goes to bed one half hour early. In other words, three papers sent home means bedtime is 90 minutes early that evening.
Q. We have a son who just turned 18 but is still a junior in high school. While my husband and I were away, our son went to visit his girlfriend (who lives an hour away) after we told him not to because it was too late and a school night. He told us "I'm 18 now and can do whatever I want!" and then hung up. He has not given us much trouble in the past, and accepts responsibility for both his job and school. Our concern is his blatant defiance over the girlfriend, with whom he recently skipped school. How should we handle this?
A. At the next possible opportunity, when he is gone from the house for a few hours, I would clean out his room leaving only essential furniture and his clothing. Take everything he owns, even things he purchased, to a storage facility. When he comes home tell him that either he agrees to obey you, without exception, for as long as he chooses to enjoy the fact that you pay most if not all of his bills, or he can move out now. If he chooses to move out, return his possessions when he is in his own apartment (as opposed to staying at someone else's house). If he chooses to stay in your home, tell him that he is on a two-month probation period, after which his possessions will be returned.
If, during his probation, he defies you one time, his two-month probation begins over again the next day. This is a watershed moment in your relationship with your son.