Hi J.,
I don't know if you've considered the possibility that his behavioral issues have less to do with social problems as scholastic insecurity. I too had some issues with my son when he started...he is a very good, sensitive child, but a bit aggressive at times, and I was told he was either being disruptive, or lazy. After talking with him, I figured out that he just wasn't understanding his lessons, and that what he needed was more one-on-one instruction time in the "basics". Once I attended to it and he got his concepts down, his manner changed. He became more confident, more attentive, and problems stopped occuring. The other possibility is he may be looking to attract attention to himself. Some kids don't care what kind of attention they get as long as it's attention, i.e. my daughter. She would hit my other daughter, and one day, instead of punishing her, I asked her what was on her mind. She told me she hit her sister because I was ignoring her. After explaining to her that when I'm working, I don't often hear her because I'm so focused, and what to do when she wanted my attention. The misbehavior then stopped. Anyway, I'm long-winded, but the thing to do is figure out the cause of the misbehavior. I don't know if it's things like ADHD...I'm on the fence on that one because most kids have a short attention span anyway. Talk to him, and most importantly, listen to him. Ask probing questions. How do you feel when this happens? When you hit someone, why do you think you did it? How did it make you feel? What do you think your teacher should do about it? What do you want so that you don't hit someone? What's he thinking? ...just to name a few. Then, address the cause with love and assurance that no matter what he's going through, you're there for him, and he can always count on you if he needs someone to talk with or answer any questions. Good luck.