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AIBU?

to move my daughter to a local school because she won't get out of bed in the morning?

160 replies

papayasareyum · 03/03/2017 15:16

She's 14.
She loves school and has lots of friends there. We decided to send her to a village school which is 11 miles away. It's a lovely small high school with excellent results and reputation, unlike the large local high school. She has to get a school bus just before 8 in the morning. She just won't get up though without constant nagging, bribing, cajoling, arguing and then screaming. She calls me names and is generally horrible. (Her behaviour lately is shocking: name calling, mean to her sisters and zero respect)
If she misses the bus, there's no other way to get to school. So I end up driving her. It's a 60 minute round trip! I work from home, but have seen a few tempting jobs recently and not bothered applying because I know that the regular occasions I have to drive a stroppy 14 year old to school will piss off any employer as it will make me late for work.
She's in year 9, so I could move her to our local school, which is a 10 minute walk from home. If she refuses to get up, she'll be late. But no need to drive her in. (she's not bothered on the occasions I can't or won't drive her in, attendance doesn't bother her)
Do I move her? Would that be unreasonable? I'm sick of the impact that her screaming and refusing to be up in time has on the rest of us. It's averaging at about 3 times a week. Every week. I'm drained. She doesn't want to move to the new school, but I'm not sure I can cope with another 2.5 years of this before and finishes school and year 9 is the last opportunity to move her before GCSEs.
I've threatened to move her and she just says that she'll refuse to go and we can't make her!

OP posts:
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Frazzled2207 · 05/03/2017 10:28

I actually remember being you daughter and my mother giving me lifts when I missed the bus and making herself very late.

I think you need to speak to the school, get them on board then stop offering lifts, let her be absent a couple of times and see what happens. If my mother had done this i'm fairly sure I would have sorted myself out.

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Frazzled2207 · 05/03/2017 10:29

Btw i think it's a great idea switching wifi off at say 10pm. Good for parents too who might have to actually talk to each other rather than stare at phones.

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dorisdog · 05/03/2017 10:51

Oh, I have something very similar going on. Have a bucketload of sympathy. So instead of hardline 'sanctions' I'm using a more 'consequences' type approach. Ie she's having to deal with the consequences of her actions. I don't drive her, she gets a detention. We were threatened with a fine if her attendance didn't improve, she knows this money will be deducted from her pocket money because we can't afford it.

It seems to be working. We asked the attendance officer to meet and speak to her. A combination of authority and financial consequences seem to be working, whilst we've made it clear that we know she's under pressure and we'll help her in any reasonable way. The shouting and power battles seemed to have stopped with this approach.

But sigh it's been hard.

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Ledkr · 05/03/2017 11:30

The app is called Our Pact. You can set schedules etc. She has to agree to accept the connection but as I pay the bill that wasn't a problem! Grin
I know some kids have free access and that's fine but personally my dd can't cope with it, she's always struggled to get to sleep so having her phone just made that worse.
I heard her telling her mate she's glad I block it on school nights as she's getting more sleep.

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jemsywemsy · 05/03/2017 11:44

Someone I work with was always 15 mins late for work. She said it was heavy traffic so they moved her start time back 15 mins. Guess what? She then ended up 15 mins later than her new start time every day. I suspect this would happen with your daughter. Getting up for the school bus for 8 isn't really much harder than getting up to walk to school at 8.40 or whatever, if you're just not a morning person. So I'm not sure what the answer is but I don't think moving school is it.

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Frustrateduselesscounsellor · 05/03/2017 13:36

I wouldn't move her as you are not really dealing with the problem which is her bad behaviour. Just because she is a 'teenager' it doesn't mean she gets out of consequences for bad behaviour. Like others who have said to ensure she is getting a good nights sleep and then it's her responsibility to get herself up and off to school on time. I'd talk to the school aswell about the issue and that if she misses school because you are not driving her she will have to stay late and make up the learning. And work at the weekend rather than go out with friends. I would discuss with school and your husband what the consequences will be and then clearly tell her that you will no longer tolerate this. Set the expectation of what you require her to do and let her know that if she doesn't do it she will get the consequence. And be really firm about it- follow it through however much she screams and yells. She has to know that you are not a walkover.

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InvisibleKittenAttack · 05/03/2017 14:16

The difference here jemsy is that the ops DD can't just be late at the current school, if the op doesn't drive her, she gets the bus or doesn't go at all, not arrive late.

Having a "being late" at the local school means the DD will get detentions etc but still will go to school. (Albeit late).

I still think the "grown up chat" route and get it to be her choice is the way forward. Mum is applying for a job that means she can't drive DD to school, what does the DD think will be the best option?

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3rdtimestupid · 03/08/2020 10:37

Take phone off her at night and she gets it back when she's heading to the bus stop in the morning x

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3rdtimestupid · 03/08/2020 10:40

Fuck sake this was 3 years ago lol she's probably got her GCSE's now lol

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AranciaRosso · 03/08/2020 10:41

What a pointless resurrection of a not particularly interesting zombie thread.
Why? @3rdtimestupid. Just why?

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