When children from the Woodland Park community experience frightening events such as accidents, emergency illnesses, or a
death in the family, parents usually prepare me with a little back story and an assessment of how their child is handling it. More often than not, the child is clearly eager to get back to the normalcy of school, but I always take a quiet moment during the day to broach the subject with the child. Sometimes they let me know by their silence or by changing the subject that they’re not ready to talk about it. But more often than not they
do talk, and in what they say I always hear their parents’ voices putting things in perspective.
1 comment:
Hi Tom,
My name is Stephanie Tisdale. I am a student in EDM310 at the University of South Alabama. I enjoyed reading your blog post. I think it’s great that you check to see if a child is okay when they go through a tragic event. I believe it is important for teachers to be there for their students, since teacher’s impact their lives each day.
Thanks for posting!
My Twitter address is: @_Steph_Tisdale
My class blog: http://edm310.blogspot.com/
Link to my blog: http://tisdalestephanieedm310.blogspot.com/
-Stephanie Tisdale
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