Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks PP. I am thinking mostly of calling a meeting so that DD hears it from someone other than her parents and so that she understands what’s at stake, and that she seriously needs to ask for help/use the interventions.
There’s no guarantee she will do that much better using them, but at least she will be able to show that she did, and we can go from there.
IME, the team is more likely to say the you, the parent, are the problem because you just can't understand and aren't willing to accept that your kid is just not that bright. That's what our team did. OFC, they were wrong. But, I'm just saying, the IEP team is not your friend in that sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks PP. I am thinking mostly of calling a meeting so that DD hears it from someone other than her parents and so that she understands what’s at stake, and that she seriously needs to ask for help/use the interventions.
There’s no guarantee she will do that much better using them, but at least she will be able to show that she did, and we can go from there.
I agree with this. Our IEP team had such little faith they were pushing toward alternative diploma. We refused. They demanded IQ test (I presume to show us he was not bright). He has a normal IQ and the test showed that AND then they buckled down and got him help. It was a long process. Ugh.
IME, the team is more likely to say the you, the parent, are the problem because you just can't understand and aren't willing to accept that your kid is just not that bright. That's what our team did. OFC, they were wrong. But, I'm just saying, the IEP team is not your friend in that sense.
Anonymous wrote:Well then, PP, if what we need is an intervention of sorts … how do I make that happen? It’s dang near impossible to have all these teachers on the same page. They have been responsive in email. And the school is so huge, I feel like they’re overwhelmed with their caseload and more responsive to the kids who ask for help, meanwhile, my kid is falling through the cracks.
Anonymous wrote:I would call an IEP meeting with the teachers you mention here and see if the coach can come, AND your kid. Lay it all out and ask for suggestions. A sport is key to exercise and cognitive health, so I’d try to not cut that. Remember that her brain is likely a few years behind her chronological age, and she needs more teacher oversight than others her age. Point that out. Can she go back to the previous school?
And approach it all with the mindset that this must feel horrible for her and she’s not trying to screw up. While you can see clearly what she should, her brain just isn’t ready for that. She needs a written plan for each class with frequent adult check-ins. If each teacher can’t attend a meeting, then you and the kid meet with them independently. If she’s failing, then the IEP isn’t working. Is she in self-contained classes where there is more adult direction?
Anonymous wrote:Thanks PP. I am thinking mostly of calling a meeting so that DD hears it from someone other than her parents and so that she understands what’s at stake, and that she seriously needs to ask for help/use the interventions.
There’s no guarantee she will do that much better using them, but at least she will be able to show that she did, and we can go from there.