Mom makes kids walk 7 km, carrying sign saying they were rude to bus driver - Action News
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Windsor

Mom makes kids walk 7 km, carrying sign saying they were rude to bus driver

The Children's Aid Society is questioning an Ontario mother's decision to post pictures of her sons walking seven kilometres to school carrying a cardboard sign as a punishment for being rude to their bus driver.

Photos of boys carrying cardboard sign has been shared more than 38,000 times

A Harrow, Ont., mother made her two sons walk seven kilometres to school as a punishment for being rude to their bus driver, and posted pictures of the trek on social media. (Facebook)

It isn't the seven-kilometre walk, or even the cardboard sign that read, in all capital letters: "Being bad and rude to our bus driver! Moms makin us walk."

For thelocal Children's Aid Society, the issue is a Harrow, Ont., mom's decision to post photos of her punishing her two elementary-aged sons to social media.

In a Facebook post published Tuesday, the motherwrote she took action after getting a call from her sons'school about their poor behaviour.

"That drew the line for me! This morning we did a 7 km walk to show them what everyday will be like for them when they get kicked off the bus!" she wrote.

"2 hours later they made it!" To protect the identities of the children, CBC News is not naming the mother.

The mother posted photos of the boys walking on Tuesday. The post has since gone viral with 30,000 shares and more than 24,000 reactions. (Facebook)

The post had been shared more than 38,000 times by 5:30 p.m. ET on Thursday. Itreceived more than 28,000 "likes" and other reactions and dozens of comments, most of which seem to celebratethe actions of a "real parent."

"You re frickenrockin the mom hat girl good job," wrote one commenter.

"Awesom job mom!!" added another. "This is how you raise children."

Many people expressed support for the mother's actions, while others were critical and threatened to call the Children's Aid Society. (Facebook)

The mother toldCBCthe older boy learned his lesson quickly, but said her younger son needed to walk a second day. She did not post that punishment to social media.

She said she received some backlash and threats after posting the pictures, so she made a preemptive call to the Children's Aid Society (CAS) herself to explain her side of the story.

Logical punishments work, shaming does not

TinaGatt, manager of community outreach for the Windsor-Essex CASoffice, would neither confirm that call nor address whether the incident merits an investigation.

Gattdid say having kids walk to school to show them the "logical consequence" of misbehavingon the bus can be a reasonable punishment as long as there are no safety threats, and there appear to have been no threats in this case.

The mother accompanied the boys on the walk and, in the photos, are seen alongside what looks like a quiet, rural road. Harrow is a community of less than 3,000 people, about 30 kilometres southeast of Windsor.

But "shaming" them on social media is not constructive, Gatt said.

"I don't want to judge or pretend to know all of the nuances of this situation with this parent, but [it's] something to consider when we think about putting signs on kids that says what the bad behaviour isand putting them in a position where you take their picture and put it on social media," she explained.

"We would be concerned, and not just Children's Aid, we should be concerned as adults, about shaming children."

Tina Gatt, manager of community outreach for the Windsor-Essex Childrens Aid Society, says shaming simply doesn't help kids behave. (Melissa Nakhavoly/CBC)

Gatt said shaming rarely works with adults and "simply is not going to motivate children to be better."

She added it's possible the mother was looking for reinforcement from her fellow parents that the punishment was just.

"For this parent, perhaps it was to get some acknowledgement from her peer group to say 'Is this right?'" Gattsaid."But just to be shaming children is not motivating for good behaviour."

With files from Melissa Nakhavoly