Try the reward process. Use the other children to role model with. You have to show him with other children that the behavior is not acceptable. Give him a time when he has to keep his glasses on and a time when he can take them off. Designate a box for his items. During class time he must wear them but at recess he has the option to take them off. When on the playground have people talk to him. He will figure out that he needs the hearing aid to know what is going on.
Common sense.
by throwing
It isn't you go and throw grapes whereever you want :) In addition to the general practice of throwing anything in a classroom being against school rules, grapes are small (hard to see), soft (hard to detect when stepped on), and (when stepped on) considerably slippery: thus presenting a significant risk for dangerous accidents.
One way is throwing potions or materials on the floor, or throwing chemicals or other items at someone else.
the use of shovel is for taking up,removing or throwing loose matter,as earth,snow or coal
Yes. In addition to harboring diseases, toilets hurt when you hit your head against them as you pass out after throwing up.
it means that they both were throwing fits and throwing up it means that they both were throwing fits and throwing up it means that they both were throwing fits and throwing up it means that they both were throwing fits and throwing up
This depends upon what it is that you are throwing. Throwing a javelin is not like throwing a fit, or throwing a fight. Let's say you are throwing a javelin. Your throwing could be accurate, powerful, and (since a javelin is a weapon) perhaps deadly. But all of that depends upon context.
Someone that damages things. In the early days of factory machines that spun yarn, disgruntled workers could damage machines by removing a wooden shoe (sabot) and throwing it into the machine. Thus they became saboteurs.
Throwing a pointed weapon.
Throwing Knives was created in 2000.
its throwing a sledgehammer