Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Nope, the school has an obligation to address these gaps.
Exactly. And students with disabilities, particularly ADHD, will not respond effectively to the attention demands of Saturday school or afterschool tutoring, when they need to be recovering from the school week (which is more demanding on them neurologically than those without such LDs). The learning and gaps need to be addressed with teachers present during the school day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Nope, the school has an obligation to address these gaps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Nope, the school has an obligation to address these gaps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Nope, the school has an obligation to address these gaps.
Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Anonymous wrote:My child is in high school. He has disabilities and his performance declined greatly during online learning. The biggest deficit is in math and he appears to have not made any forward progress for the last two years.
For those parents who have children that have gaps in learning, is your school filling in those gaps? If so, how?
Is the return to in person learning what you expected?