Anonymous wrote:This is anecdote only as we don't have a child enrolled there, but we do have a number of friends with children who meet the profile of your son who have been very happy with Silver Creek. They found the resources to be terrific for their children. We also know of at least one family who left private for SCMS because the supports were stronger than they could get in a small private setting. In addition to reaching out to Dr. Townsend, see if you can get an appointment with a member of their counseling/education management team to see what they can offer for your son.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Actually, if his behavior is still too impulsive, even with meds, he probably needs either another med check or executive function tutoring. In my experience at very similar MS, behavior was not an issue — there will be kids with more severe issues. However, at a small private, behavior is an issue - more detentions, silent lunches, poor behavior / effort grades on report cards, etc. Don’t mistake small class size for suddenly improved behavior.
Thanks for the reply. I actually was thinking the small class size would let the teachers get to know him and so would recognize tapping a pencil as an impulse vs. a misbehavior. Not major misbehaviors going on, just active boy stuff. He's got a good heart and I'm worried it won't be seen in a larger crowd.
I hate when parents claim their child's behavior or medical issue is just "active boy stuff". It's not. There are plenty of boys who can sit in a class without impulsive behavior. If your child has an identified medical problem, own it and work on treating it. Don't chalk it up to "active boy stuff."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Actually, if his behavior is still too impulsive, even with meds, he probably needs either another med check or executive function tutoring. In my experience at very similar MS, behavior was not an issue — there will be kids with more severe issues. However, at a small private, behavior is an issue - more detentions, silent lunches, poor behavior / effort grades on report cards, etc. Don’t mistake small class size for suddenly improved behavior.
Thanks for the reply. I actually was thinking the small class size would let the teachers get to know him and so would recognize tapping a pencil as an impulse vs. a misbehavior. Not major misbehaviors going on, just active boy stuff. He's got a good heart and I'm worried it won't be seen in a larger crowd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Actually, if his behavior is still too impulsive, even with meds, he probably needs either another med check or executive function tutoring. In my experience at very similar MS, behavior was not an issue — there will be kids with more severe issues. However, at a small private, behavior is an issue - more detentions, silent lunches, poor behavior / effort grades on report cards, etc. Don’t mistake small class size for suddenly improved behavior.
Thanks for the reply. I actually was thinking the small class size would let the teachers get to know him and so would recognize tapping a pencil as an impulse vs. a misbehavior. Not major misbehaviors going on, just active boy stuff. He's got a good heart and I'm worried it won't be seen in a larger crowd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Actually, if his behavior is still too impulsive, even with meds, he probably needs either another med check or executive function tutoring. In my experience at very similar MS, behavior was not an issue — there will be kids with more severe issues. However, at a small private, behavior is an issue - more detentions, silent lunches, poor behavior / effort grades on report cards, etc. Don’t mistake small class size for suddenly improved behavior.
Thanks for the reply. I actually was thinking the small class size would let the teachers get to know him and so would recognize tapping a pencil as an impulse vs. a misbehavior. Not major misbehaviors going on, just active boy stuff. He's got a good heart and I'm worried it won't be seen in a larger crowd.
Anonymous wrote:Actually, if his behavior is still too impulsive, even with meds, he probably needs either another med check or executive function tutoring. In my experience at very similar MS, behavior was not an issue — there will be kids with more severe issues. However, at a small private, behavior is an issue - more detentions, silent lunches, poor behavior / effort grades on report cards, etc. Don’t mistake small class size for suddenly improved behavior.