How did Charlie behaviour return to normal
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Answer:-
In "Charles," kindergartener Laurie lies about the existence of a troublemaker named Charles. He tells his parents that Charles has been hitting students, hurting other students, and generally being a bad influence. At a PTA meeting, Laurie's mother learns that there is no Charles.
Laurie is in his first month of kindergarten. Every afternoon, he tells his parents about a classmate named Charles who has been getting in trouble at school.
Among other things, Charles has been hitting teachers, inciting students to use a bad word, and hurting his classmates. When he has a brief period of good behavior, Laurie's father is suspicious and says it won't last.
Laurie's mother attends a PTA meeting alone. There, she speaks with Laurie's teacher, who reveals that Laurie has been having trouble in school and that there is no Charles. Based on this, the reader is left to assume that Charles is actually Laurie lying to his parents.
The narrator tells the story of Laurie’s first month at kindergarten. Laurie comes home each day to report on the doings of a fellow student, Charles, who behaves in an extraordinary manner. For the first two weeks, Charles is spanked or otherwise punished almost daily for being “fresh,” for hitting or kicking the teachers, for injuring fellow students, and for a host of proscribed activities. Charles proves so interesting to the kindergarten class that whenever he is punished, all the students watch him; whenever he stays after school, all the students stay with him.