Anonymous wrote:Sports goes under the umbrella of school. Doesn't he have to pass to play sports? Dh needs to be fully in charge of school. They can sit together in the evening, study, go over all deadlines and enter things in the calendar, all before they start on sports. Or do it after practice but if they don't do it when they get home then no practice next day and he risks getting dropped unless he has a handle on school.
Anonymous wrote:Eh, I would drop most of the scheduled activities and have a talk about trade school with him.
Because that is actually not a bad option. Seriously, even after he gets through college, what then with this organization skills deficit?
The licensed skilled trades pay very well actually.
Anonymous wrote:Executive Function coach, stat. This is when you throw $ at the problem to save the relationship.
Ask the school counselor for names, ask all your friends, ask on the school list serv - I promise you, more kids have them than you know about[/quote
That’s what we did! It took a while but we found one. This was the second coach we’ve tried - she’s amazing! I love the “throw $ at the problem to save relationship”. That is very true. We did. And it has. The cost isn’t bad compared to some we’ve heard. And the coaching has had a big impact on al of us. It’s been great. Stay strong. It will get better.
Anonymous wrote:You think your freshman son isn't also hormonal? You think he appreciates being screamed at? Has it occurred to you that he spends all day surrounded by OTHER hormonal teens and then comes home to his stressed out perimenopausal mother who is stressed about his grandparent? Why aren't you letting him fail? Get the bad grades? Because he won't get into a good college? But you can't go with him to college. Let him get into an easier college where he can succeed. Tell his teachers to STOP reaching out to you when he doesn't show up for his extra help. They can reach out to him or call him out for it when they see him the next day
Teach him when his schedule will be out of the norm (like staying late for extra help) to set an alarm on his phone that reminds him what he's supposed to do. And then drop that rope.