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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "What typically happens to a violent kid in the classroom? "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Teacher here. [i]What people are failing to understand,[/i][b] is that the child may not be special needs or may not have all of the required paper work or assessments to have a diagnosis or an IEP. It is a long process in which could incorporate MANY people (psychologist, doctors, lawyers, special education department, parents, etc). Finding the right needs of the child will not happen with a flip of a switch. There is a lot of trial and error along the way. Does it mean that other children should not be kept safe in the classroom? Absolutely not. So what can you do as a parent on the other end of the child that may be hurting others? Sit in on the classrooms to observe behaviors not just of other children but of your child. What can your child do differently in the classroom? Maybe sit somewhere else? Maybe help this student less? or more? Hold a meeting with the admin team and come up with a game plan on how the school will keep your child safe in the classroom as it currently seems unsafe. [/quote] lady all of us understand that except op[/quote] It’s been 3 years of this student and hundred of incident reports in this grade. They have a full time aide that in unable to control them. I’m asking the next steps in a situation like this. No need to be defensive because your own child is similar. [/quote] The next steps is the school district to agree to a more restrictive environment in the public system, or a publicly funded private school. So basically the school/parents needs to get the system to give them $50,000 this year and every year. It's not that easy to do. Harder if the other parents won't agree to it. It might involve the parents suing the school district for a change of placement, so then there's a whole timeline in court. All you can do is continue to document and request a change of classroom. I know you feel like it's been a long time-- it has-- but you have to understand that they *are* trying things on their end, which FERPA likely prevents them from disclosing to you, and you need to continue your documentation so that there's a paper trail that each intervention has failed. It's not enough to show it's been bad for 3 years-- you need to show that it's still bad now, ongoing. [/quote]
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