Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I emailed the teacher and asked her to clarify the grading rubric as well as detail the behavior that resulted in him not earning 18 of 25 points. teacher responded with: "oops, I made a mistake in the grade entry and recorded points lost instead of earned, and meant to email you but we had technology issues, so sorry".
She also explained the lost points: three points lost for teamwork for making a comment to a kid about smacking him if he cut the pancake wrong (no evidence that anyone took this seriously with the exception of the teacher). Okay, makes sense, stupid comment, dock him for teamwork, he ends up with 7/10 points for that. The other 5 points were lost on clean up (5 of 5 possible points) because of the following circumstances: one kid burped; teacher corrects him. My kid burped moments later; she tells him to sit out for final 5 minutes of class if he can't behave. So he has to sit our for clean up, meaning there is no way he can earn those points, so he gets 0/5 points for clean up. She says neither of these is a "big deal".
So here's what I take from it: one, she can't do math. Not sure how she arrived at 7 points in the grading system if she meant 8 points lost and got the "lost" versus "earned" confused. Two, she applies different consequences for different kids. Burping kid #1 gets a verbal correction; burping kid #2 gets told to set out and automatically loses 20% of his potential grade.
She's already updated the grade in the system to 17/25 points. He has now earned a D+.
He got a different punishment because she'd already given the class a verbal warning about burping and he went ahead and did it anyway. Your kids was defiant and disrespectful. and he didn't tell you about that despite your claims that he's always very self-aware and honest about his behavior.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Okay, I see the point about being the second to burp. I'll be sure to work with my child so I can ensure he never again engages in Defiant & Disrespectful Burping (which was surely his goal).
I would bet, though, that if Sarah Sweetpea burped immediately after her lab mate did the same, she wouldn't have been told to sit for the last five minutes and lost 20% of the grade. This is a good lesson for my kid, though, in that he is annoying and therefore will be punished more aggressively.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Okay, I see the point about being the second to burp. I'll be sure to work with my child so I can ensure he never again engages in Defiant & Disrespectful Burping (which was surely his goal).
I would bet, though, that if Sarah Sweetpea burped immediately after her lab mate did the same, she wouldn't have been told to sit for the last five minutes and lost 20% of the grade. This is a good lesson for my kid, though, in that he is annoying and therefore will be punished more aggressively.
OP, your goal is not to get your kid through childhood with the fewest possible consequences for his ADHD, because his ADHD isn't going to disappear when he graduates. Your job right now is to help him develop the skills he will need to manage his ADHD as an adult so that he's not getting fired from jobs for cracking jokes inappropriate during a client meeting and getting divorced because his spouse can't tolerate his unwillingness to take responsibility for himself. Man up and be a better parent.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Okay, I see the point about being the second to burp. I'll be sure to work with my child so I can ensure he never again engages in Defiant & Disrespectful Burping (which was surely his goal).
I would bet, though, that if Sarah Sweetpea burped immediately after her lab mate did the same, she wouldn't have been told to sit for the last five minutes and lost 20% of the grade. This is a good lesson for my kid, though, in that he is annoying and therefore will be punished more aggressively.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Okay, I see the point about being the second to burp. I'll be sure to work with my child so I can ensure he never again engages in Defiant & Disrespectful Burping (which was surely his goal).
I would bet, though, that if Sarah Sweetpea burped immediately after her lab mate did the same, she wouldn't have been told to sit for the last five minutes and lost 20% of the grade. This is a good lesson for my kid, though, in that he is annoying and therefore will be punished more aggressively.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I emailed the teacher and asked her to clarify the grading rubric as well as detail the behavior that resulted in him not earning 18 of 25 points. teacher responded with: "oops, I made a mistake in the grade entry and recorded points lost instead of earned, and meant to email you but we had technology issues, so sorry".
She also explained the lost points: three points lost for teamwork for making a comment to a kid about smacking him if he cut the pancake wrong (no evidence that anyone took this seriously with the exception of the teacher). Okay, makes sense, stupid comment, dock him for teamwork, he ends up with 7/10 points for that. The other 5 points were lost on clean up (5 of 5 possible points) because of the following circumstances: one kid burped; teacher corrects him. My kid burped moments later; she tells him to sit out for final 5 minutes of class if he can't behave. So he has to sit our for clean up, meaning there is no way he can earn those points, so he gets 0/5 points for clean up. She says neither of these is a "big deal".
So here's what I take from it: one, she can't do math. Not sure how she arrived at 7 points in the grading system if she meant 8 points lost and got the "lost" versus "earned" confused. Two, she applies different consequences for different kids. Burping kid #1 gets a verbal correction; burping kid #2 gets told to set out and automatically loses 20% of his potential grade.
She's already updated the grade in the system to 17/25 points. He has now earned a D+.
Anonymous wrote:I have 2 ADHD kids OP. One is a super distractible boy.
I do think that a cooking class is like a science lab. Kids screwing around are a safety hazard. I also think that ADHD kids often do not realize how distracting they are. From his perspective he might really believe he was just telling funny stories and was doing nothing wrong. And from the teacher’s perspective, he was not paying attention around ovens and knives, and keeping other kids from paying attention as well. And did not kistenterbeing warned several times. I doubt he is being manipulative or lying. But he may not have realized the extent of the problems he created. And he needs understand the rationale behind the grade. Because of lab science in high school. This situation will happen again unlessyou address it.
I would email the teacher. Cc the counselor. Cc special ed. And say”hey, I as concerned because the F is unusual, and Larlo wasn’t able to explain why he failed. I see the lab behavior notation. And I know he would not have failed unless something serious happened. Can you explain what happened to me, so I can work on this with Larlo?
Be open to the idea that your kid may not be accurately reporting the whole story before you go in guns blazing. Either you will get a reasonable explanation from the teacher in which case, you need to talk to Larlo about what happened and why he got an F. Take the B as a quarter grade in a throwaway class in MS, and let him learn from it. And if the explanation is not reasonable, pursue it further with the counselor, special ed, and administration.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Grade was for the lab only. Class grade before the lab was an A. Grade after the lab was a B.
I know my kid. I know when he isn't telling the whole story. He's being honest with me here. He knows I check the other side of the story and he knows I hold him responsible for his behavior.
The other teachers aren't giving him a "pass" on behavior. We heard NOTHING about him being disruptive or poorly behaved - but did hear about distraction and attention. Those teachers seem to look at him a bit differently: kid needs redirection to focus on task at hand sometimes but is a good kid and well within their limits of normal middle school experience. This FACS teacher is a whole different ballgame.
I plan to follow up with her and ask for specifics from the final lab so I can understand the grade.
Anonymous wrote:Wait! Can you get at IEP b/c your kid doesn't pay attention and distracts others? As a parent of one goody two shoes (who get seated next to the trouble makers) and one kid who needs constant reinforcement, I'm uber-suprised you can get accommodations b/c your kids won't behave in class. My youngest needs constant reinforcement, but I won't accept that him being a jerk is OK b/c he has "needs". That actually pisses me off. Teach manners!