Anonymous wrote:This was my high school kid in early high school. I think there is a difference between doing what you are currently doing, which is clearly unsustainable and doing zero.
I think you have to start slowly backing away and letting them have tutors and saying you won’t do one on one if they’re yelling at you and try to get the school to help more I’m back away slowly so that hopefully they have support
My ADHD kid is now in college-he really pulled it together later in high school as I backed off and he did actually file couple of tests and then I got him to recover. In college, he is succeeding with extra time and tutoring-but it’s a small college with support
Anonymous wrote:That was my sibling, now a successful business executive, multi-millionaire. YMMD.
Anonymous wrote:If they fail out of HS how do you expect them to successfully go to community college? A HS diploma is one of the most important keys to a successful adult life. If you don’t want to be supporting your child into adulthood you need to keep working with them.
A couple of suggestions. Reevaluate medication and possibly diagnosis. Second, try to get them into a program where academic classes isn’t a significant part of the day, like a vocational program.