Kicked Out of Daycare: Now What?

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“If this behavior continues to happen, we will have no choice but to ask you to leave the daycare center.” Words I never wanted to hear about my four year old, but words that I knew were on the verge of being said. We were already on a slippery slope with fits and rages that lasted for more than two hours, complaints from other parents, aggressive behavior, and daily calls from the director. Our home life wasn’t much better. The only bright spot we had was that no one complained about his fits . . . it was just us, his parents, trying to survive them.

To say it all erupted before my eyes on that spring day is an understatement. To say it had been brewing for a matter of months to a year would be more accurate. We were a family desperately trying to keep it all together with three kids at home, the youngest less than a year, both of the parents full-time teachers. Yes, two teachers had a child of their own whom they could not control, and I was grieving the loss of my mother just months before. It was the perfect storm, and our son was the eye of it.

Looking back, things started downhill much sooner that we initially realized. Andrew was always a “needy baby.” Crawling at six months, he would search me out if he knew I was in the room. After a long day at school, I would lay on the floor at night and let him just crawl all over me. I thought, “This sweet baby just misses his momma.” Now, I know it was much more.

At the age of two, he started full-time at a daycare center for the first time. We knew he would definitely keep them on their toes. He was talking in complete sentences before the age of 18 months and had more energy than the Energizer Bunny. He would take boxes of cereal out of my pantry and dump them on the floor before I could blink. I did all I could to stay one step ahead of him at all times.

He was loud all of time and bounced from place to place long into the night. He was a horrible sleeper. His older sister slept through the night at 10 weeks. We had been spoiled, for sure. We were practically “night of the living dead” by the time he decided to sleep through the night more than two years later.

Sad Face
Family outings were often not fun for everyone.

And public places? Forget about it. Any family outing almost always ended early because he was melting down before our eyes. It was a beating. We tried our best to just “survive his personality,” only to realize years later that it wasn’t his personality so much as it was his “hard wiring.”

So, hearing those dreaded words on that fateful March morning really was almost a relief. In fact, it was more than a relief . . . it was validation that something was “not quite right” with our son. He needed help, professional help, beyond what our degrees in teaching could offer.

Where to start? The million dollar question with no “one size fits all” solution. Just keep trying and don’t give up. If one thing doesn’t work, try the next thing.

First Stop: A Visit to Your Pediatrician

Schedule your child a visit with his or her pediatrician. Don’t wait for the next scheduled “well child” visit. Precious time could be lost if you do.

The sooner you get to the root of your child’s behavioral issues, the better it will be for all. Tell them what you see at home . . . don’t hold back. They won’t judge. Tell them what happens at daycare and other places. The more places that it happens, the more likely they will see that it is more than a phase.

Try Another Center

Sometimes, it is nothing more than just “not the right fit” for your kid. Tour other facilities or home day cares in your area. You may find that the next place that you choose is just what your kid needed. However, if the next center doesn’t work out either, consider it a sign that there is more going on with your child than just a “bad fit.”

smiling boy
Once we found help for our boy, we found our HAPPY boy!

Find a Therapist

Ask your pediatrician for recommendations of a good child therapist. Call your insurance and see what benefits they cover. A common misconception is medical insurance does not cover counseling and other mental health services. Sometimes, you will need a pre-authorization, but we have never been denied services for our son since starting this journey.

We started weekly therapy with our son. While it helped, we knew all along we were going to need more than just therapy to get him to a “happy place.”

Contact Your Local School District

If things continue to go south after following the previous suggestions, it is time to contact the school district. We started with the early childhood center in our district. They suggested we seek help through a program called Child Find. It was the perfect fit for us. We were granted an evaluation complete with a behavioral assessment as well as cognitive abilities.

You may find that changing centers is the only thing you need to do to find your child’s inner peace. However, many children, like mine, need more. They need more than the average mom or dad can offer. We managed to survive the storm and have come out on the other side in a much better place. It was not done without help from others. If you find yourself in a similar situation with your child’s daycare center, don’t despair. There is help out there.

If you have ever been in a similar situation, there are resources out there to help guide you to answers. Dr. Ross Greene, a well-known clinical child psychologist, has an amazing book, The Explosive Child, that will give you the strategies needed to parent “a spirited child.”

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Anna
Anna moved to Fort Worth fresh out of college in hopes of finding a job. She quickly landed a teaching job on the northside of town and has officially declared Texas her home “for the time being.” Spending the last two and half years in her “cloffice,” she devoted all of her evenings and weekends to online lectures, grad school assignments, and research. She recently graduated with her masters in special education with an emphasis in dyslexia and acquired a strong dislike of statistics and APA7 in the process. Married for 21 years and a mom to three teens, she spends her free time recouping the thousands and thousands of hours of lost sleep that motherhood gifted her. When not napping, you can find her listening to her favorite crime podcasts, singing showtunes, or attending any school event that involves her talented offspring. She openly shares her journey of parenting a neurodiverse teenager through the unpredictable, yet rewarding, days of high school to help families like hers.

14 COMMENTS

  1. Thanks for posting. It’s hard to talk about our kids in an honest way like this – that they are not perfect and that we all face parenting challenges. My family has had ours lately, as well! Love to you and your son.

  2. Elfje, thank you for the kind words! I truly believe that sharing our story is helping so many others, even those that don’t realize it.

    • Frances, it truly has been one of the hardest things we have gone through as parents. 7 years later, we are doing better, but still have things to work on. Just know you are not alone! If you are local to FW, come join our Special Needs group. Lots of supportive mommas!

  3. My 4 year old granddaughter gets kicked out of daycare every single day. She throws fits, kicks the teacher, other kids, throws chairs, etc. This started about 9 months ago with talking back and has escalated to this horrendous behavior. If everything is going her way she is great but if she doesn’t want to do what is asked by the teacher, she goes nuts. My daughter is at risk of losing her job. She needs to be locked in a room and ignored but they can’t do that so she gets rewarded every single day with her mom, myself, great grandma or aunts picking her up. She isn’t allowed to watch TV but she doesn’t care. The biggest problem is that she does not act this way at home whatsoever. She is a little hyper, very active, great imagination. If she starts any type of aggressive behavior or throwing a fit, she is put in a room, door held until she calms down and she is ignored. They can’t do that at the daycare center. She has been to her pediatrician which was a joke. She has an appointment with a therapist but it isn’t for over a week. By then my daughter probably won’t have a job.

    • We are in this exact same boat with our 3 year old son. He only acts this way at daycare, not at home. He is a completely different child at daycare and they are threatening to kick him out. I am scheduling an appointment with his doctor who will then give me a referral to a therapist, but who knows how long that will take or if it will even help. It’s a very difficult situation and I can’t just quit my job and stay home with him.

    • Hi. I am living this right now with my 3 year old son. He listens to his dad but not me as much. When he was at school (just got kicked out today), he begins well but when it was circle time or nap time, he would be defiant by running around the room and disrupting the whole class. I do not know what else to do aside from going to a smaller daycare where he is given more attention. His big issue is listening and nap time. I feel defeated most days and mornings.

  4. Kenna, no, we discovered that he is actually on the spectrum, has ADHD, and anxiety. He is on meds and is currently doing well in middle school.

  5. Single Dad here my daughter age 3. Daycare keeps complaining about her behavior when it’s just temper tantrums they want her to get evaluated. I know she has a speech delay she’s currently in therapy. Potty training is good but it could be better she just needs a lot of prompting to go to the potty. I fear she may be kicked out of daycare. I co-parents so it’s tough especially me being visually impaired not able to drive. So I’m just venting

  6. This is all too familiar- kicked out of 3 daycares; one school and a summer camp. Kids I had never seen before would come up to me in stores and tell me how horrible my son was. (they had seen me picking him up previously) I am constantly on the brink of losing my job and if not for SSI would already be homeless. These parenting groups are what kept me from despair. Knowing I wasn’t the only parent out there going through this. Many nights crying and seeing with my own eyes that my child is the one everyone dreads walking in the room. No outings ever, forget dating. Shopping for groceries? Forget it. I found myself with my son in the middle of the Pediatricians office having a mental breakdown, ugly crying while my son told me I need to “quit making sad face; and being a baby. ” HE.DID.NOT.CARE.
    That breakdown was the best to happen for me in a long time. It opened the door for referrals. After 2 years of waitlist his dx of ASD level 1 ODD ADHD combined type DMDD and SPD diagnosis which came with medications BHIS play therapy and occupational therapy. The explosive child is an amazing book. Roaring mad riley and parenting the love and logic way classes have helped tremendously

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