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Reply to "The two SN children in DC's class slow down the pace of instruction every day, every class"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Thanks for summing up what many SN parents suspect the other parents think of their children, but won't admit to. [/quote] In our case I wonder if the school should not have told the parents about some students needing extra help, attention ecc We have a child with an extra handler but if my child had not told me I would never know what goes on in the class room. I also agree parents should stay out but the school does not communicate openly and honestly about these children and their needs or how the class might be impacted. No wonder parents get upset if we have to find out through the back door. Also parents of SN in my child's class pretend they are not, so That does not help communication either. [/quote] My son has special needs and from my point of view, it's no one else's business. I would be extremely upset if a school shared that with other parents without my permission. I expect that if my son's needs were so great that they could not be balanced with the rest of the class, the school would tell me that it's not a good fit. [/quote] I think your expectations are right on the money.[/quote] Not PP, but I had a bad experience with a private school and a child with SN. The school kept insisting that it was able to meet my son's needs. It became more and more apparent that they could not. At the point that I finally pulled my child from the school, they were continuing to insist that they could meet my child's needs when it was clear to me, my husband, and anyone who had the slightest contact with my child's class that it was a disaster. Not good for my kid. Not good for the rest of the class. They just couldn't admit that they couldn't do it. It was a complete institutional failure. [/quote]
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