Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. You start by asking your child why they are not turning in any written work. You come up with a plan together to check the online grade book or learning management system for assignments. You watch then complete written homework and pack it somewhere they won’t forget it, or help them submit it online.
2. You talk with the teacher to brainstorm some different strategies to help them. Maybe the teacher can give check-ins, prompts for attention, and reminders to turn in work. They can send unfinished work home and let you know it needs to be completed. Allowing oral responses may be an option, but it sounds like your kid can write and just isn’t, so I could see the teacher wanting to try other strategies first.
3. After you’ve tried the strategies, you request a 504 again, either because the strategies are working and you want to formalize them for next year, or because they are not working and you need a different solution.
4. If they deny you, you request a Child Study, which begins the IEP process. You probably won’t qualify for an IEP, but the school can’t ignore you. They are required by law to follow through on Child Study requests.
5. If still no progress, you elevate through the school system, hire an advocate, or look for a different school.
OP this is a good approach. Don't jump to "prove your knowledge a different way" before you know why they aren't doing the written work. Your DS is only in 6th grade, they can't give up on writing already. Remember that the schools' opening position will be, "the child doesn't need specialized teaching, the child just needs to change their behavior." Work refusal is complicated (BTDT) so don't be afraid to move forward to an advocate. Hire a good one - not one who will ask the school for a few non-significant concessions and run up your bill.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I mean not doing any written classwork and not finishing the class work at home (they don't have homework other than finishing classwork that wasn't completed at school). The teacher seemed unperturbed but this is their first year teaching and it sounded very alarming (although not surprising since this is what DC is like at home too) to me.
What do we do next? Ask for a conference? An evaluation? While the teacher's response was a bit blase, this seems like a huge red flag to me.
Anonymous wrote:1. You start by asking your child why they are not turning in any written work. You come up with a plan together to check the online grade book or learning management system for assignments. You watch then complete written homework and pack it somewhere they won’t forget it, or help them submit it online.
2. You talk with the teacher to brainstorm some different strategies to help them. Maybe the teacher can give check-ins, prompts for attention, and reminders to turn in work. They can send unfinished work home and let you know it needs to be completed. Allowing oral responses may be an option, but it sounds like your kid can write and just isn’t, so I could see the teacher wanting to try other strategies first.
3. After you’ve tried the strategies, you request a 504 again, either because the strategies are working and you want to formalize them for next year, or because they are not working and you need a different solution.
4. If they deny you, you request a Child Study, which begins the IEP process. You probably won’t qualify for an IEP, but the school can’t ignore you. They are required by law to follow through on Child Study requests.
5. If still no progress, you elevate through the school system, hire an advocate, or look for a different school.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I mean not doing any written classwork and not finishing the class work at home (they don't have homework other than finishing classwork that wasn't completed at school). The teacher seemed unperturbed but this is their first year teaching and it sounded very alarming (although not surprising since this is what DC is like at home too) to me.
What do we do next? Ask for a conference? An evaluation? While the teacher's response was a bit blase, this seems like a huge red flag to me.
Anonymous wrote:I would try for an IEP. A 504 doesn't provide any staffing or extra help to your child's teacher. It's just one more obligation she may or may not have the capacity to fulfill. If your child actually needs EXTRA attention or help, you either have to hope you can get special education services for your child or hire a tutor.