Back in the day when we started this journey with dd1, they had elaborate prize setups for good behavior. You could earn points (or toy dollars) for good behavior. There was always done color coding system as well. But you were able to earn the "berry points" from any staff member. There was a "berry store" where you could trade in your points for prizes. That became a headache to run (volunteers after school) and by the time dd was in 4th grade kids just bought the prizes they wanted with real cash from home. I don't know how that happened.
Prize buckets in class are motivating (they had them for my 1st and 2nd graders) but even with prizes, in a school that uses the color code it's usually tied to your color.
Really it's the luck of the draw if you get a teacher who can work with the color code (it's usually a requirement for schools who do use it) and still meet the needs of your child.
My dd2 had major focus issues in 1st grade. She would have always been on yellow or red with a strict teacher. Her amazing veteran teacher set up a spot for dd to go to when she needed a break and to recharge her battery. Dd would go there, scribble or color furiously for 5 min, then be able to go back to work. I'm so thankful she had a teacher who understood her needs and respected that not all young kids can sit still for 6 hours with little breaks here and there.
Cheri is there anything you could suggest to your teacher for A to have as an outlet when she feels like she must chat? Or do whatever she's being colored down for? Can you think of any relatively non-distracting activity that she could do when she needs to recharge?
Hugs----- this stuff is so frustrating.
Prize buckets in class are motivating (they had them for my 1st and 2nd graders) but even with prizes, in a school that uses the color code it's usually tied to your color.
Really it's the luck of the draw if you get a teacher who can work with the color code (it's usually a requirement for schools who do use it) and still meet the needs of your child.
My dd2 had major focus issues in 1st grade. She would have always been on yellow or red with a strict teacher. Her amazing veteran teacher set up a spot for dd to go to when she needed a break and to recharge her battery. Dd would go there, scribble or color furiously for 5 min, then be able to go back to work. I'm so thankful she had a teacher who understood her needs and respected that not all young kids can sit still for 6 hours with little breaks here and there.
Cheri is there anything you could suggest to your teacher for A to have as an outlet when she feels like she must chat? Or do whatever she's being colored down for? Can you think of any relatively non-distracting activity that she could do when she needs to recharge?
Hugs----- this stuff is so frustrating.
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