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Josh17 wrote:Forgive me if I do not sound empathetic to your experience with your son, but I think you need to consider the other factors that affect how much progress your son's teacher can make with his great needs while also handling the needs of the rest of her classroom. Advocating to get her to do better for your son will merely make things harder for her. And frankly, if I were a parent with a child in the same classroom who had to lose time and/or attention from the teacher because she was busy doing all she needed to do for your son...that you advocated for your son, I'd be upset. And then I'd start making demands.
I am the parent who has been frustrated when my child didn't get to do math because of behavior issues with another student causing them to run out of time. I'm the parent whose kid needed a little bit more time spent on a lesson but they could not because they needed to move on to the next subject and the information was not fully learned, which only made the gap wider down the road as each lesson builds on another. But there was curriculum to keep...that checklist that every teacher works under...the expectation of all they need to learn by the end of the year or they might lose their job or the school funding if test scores are not high enough. I could demand the teacher keep moving and get the math done. I could demand the teacher slow down and wait until my child has completely grasped each concept. I could demand that the teacher give me a daily or weekly progress report on my child. And so could the other 20-30 kids parents.

Mommyof5 wrote:Wow ok then I will be done here but I first have to say that I disagree that my child with a disability and my ds has others beyond the ADHD is not as deserving of an education as your Child who does not have any sort of disabilities. That is the message I took away from your post. I don't know why you think that I am NOT willing to do what is necessary I am one of only TWO room parents out of 24 kids in this room and I am active at the school and have been for the past 14 years that I have had a child there. I would gladly do her do the job of doing what it takes to help my ds in the classroom if I was allowed to and I have always been willing to work with our kids teachers so that we are supportive of schools expectations at home. What I want is to know what his problem issues are so that I can do whatever I can to make them better --- this would in the end make HER job easier. I also want my ds to be treated with respect instead of disgust and i will never ever think it is out of line to want THAT from the school.
Josh17 wrote:Mommyof5 wrote:Wow ok then I will be done here but I first have to say that I disagree that my child with a disability and my ds has others beyond the ADHD is not as deserving of an education as your Child who does not have any sort of disabilities. That is the message I took away from your post. I don't know why you think that I am NOT willing to do what is necessary I am one of only TWO room parents out of 24 kids in this room and I am active at the school and have been for the past 14 years that I have had a child there. I would gladly do her do the job of doing what it takes to help my ds in the classroom if I was allowed to and I have always been willing to work with our kids teachers so that we are supportive of schools expectations at home. What I want is to know what his problem issues are so that I can do whatever I can to make them better --- this would in the end make HER job easier. I also want my ds to be treated with respect instead of disgust and i will never ever think it is out of line to want THAT from the school.
That was not my point at all. My point was that your son should have the same quality education as any other kid. What I'm saying is that by forcing your current educational environment to do that might just make it better for him, but take away from someone else. I'm saying that sometimes it isn't about making the system work for you, but taking your son out of the system that isn't working and putting him in a place that will work for him. Even if that is at a loss for you be it financially or personal time. Maybe it is a different school...private school...with a smaller class size or finding your own resources to teach him until you can get him to a place where he can function in a classroom environment. The longer he is in an environment that is not working for him and may not get better regardless of what the teacher does (because kids will still be a factor one way or another), the more he may feel like a failure. And perhaps his ADHD is better and his behaviors are not because he is reacting to other kids the way he already has as a defense?
A skilled teacher can adjust to individual student needs to a degree. But at some point it feels like a losing battle where no one is getting what they "deserve". Is your son entitled to a customized education at the expense of other students? Is your son entitled to an education...yes. At the expense of others...no. At some point we can not expect a system that is already stretched thin to do more. At some point we CAN start doing what our system does not or can not do. The best advocate for your son is you.
Rather than forcing a square peg in a round hole...or force the hole to fit the peg...you just might find that finding the right hole is better for you, your son and other studen

stnkyferit wrote:
ETA: the teacher IMO is a boob - you have a child with a medical diagnosis and external therapies in place, and she is not taking that and running with it to advocate for a 1:1, which would make HER life better as well!

Josh17 wrote:
A skilled teacher can adjust to individual student needs to a degree. But at some point it feels like a losing battle where no one is getting what they "deserve". Is your son entitled to a customized education at the expense of other students? Is your son entitled to an education...yes. At the expense of others...no. At some point we can not expect a system that is already stretched thin to do more. At some point we CAN start doing what our system does not or can not do. The best advocate for your son is you.
Rather than forcing a square peg in a round hole...or force the hole to fit the peg...you just might find that finding the right hole is better for you, your son and other studen


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