Anonymous wrote:I have worked in elementary self-contained classes in a few different districts and I have seen increasingly more severe behavioral issues over that last few years. My current cross-cat class has more challenging behaviors that the Emotional/Behavioral disorders class I worked in 7 years ago
Anonymous wrote:Another teacher here. I agree that the best thing you can do is share your concerns with the administrators. Often they'll keep placing kids in inappropriate settings either because the parents of that child don't want their child to receive the support they *need* or because they're penny-pinching. The rest of the parents outnumber the one. Be very clear that you have concerns about your child's safety and ability to learn with the new addition in the room. Considering the fact that your child already experienced evacuations last year, you know this school isn't going to do anything until you are loud and clear. Make them squirm, let them know that if any harm comes to your child you'll sue them. Tell them that you are documenting your child's reports. This school isn't doing the right thing for anyone.
Anonymous wrote:[quote]At our school they also isolate the kids. All the kids except one or two will be sitting in groups and they will have desks alone. Its pretty terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Believe me that 99 percent of cases of young children who act like this can be managed by a good teacher with good strategies. Sometimes they need another hand temporarily. In 15 years of teaching, I have seen only a small number of kids who need a different environment. They exist but they are not common.
It's been some years since I taught, but I would agree with this. I suspect there are more kids like this than before.
However, in the 12 years I taught, I had two kids that needed to be elsewhere and were not. One was an autistic child with extreme sensory issues. He would start screaming and flailing about and could not be calmed. We could not figure out what set him off. He was not removed from my class and it was extremely disruptive and troubling to the kids--and me.
The other was a child who was extremely disturbed. She came from a very sad, abusive background. (She had been removed from that environment.) However, as much pity and sympathy I had for her, she was a constant disruption to the class. She required constant "eyes on."
The two years that those kids were in my class were very difficult and I often wonder how impacted the other kids were. They certainly were not able to have the same experience that my classes were the other years.
Two out of twelve years may not sound like much, but if your child were in those classes, you would likely feel that it was a lot.
Anonymous wrote:8:51 is absolutely correct about the lack of capacity. If there are no available seats in a private special ed school, the child has to be enrolled in the public school until a space opens up. There are very few of those schools serving many counties. The $60k figure is accurate and that is to provide a very, very basic no frills education.
Believe me that 99 percent of cases of young children who act like this can be managed by a good teacher with good strategies. Sometimes they need another hand temporarily. In 15 years of teaching, I have seen only a small number of kids who need a different environment. They exist but they are not common.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These threads make me so angry and rage cry. I've had a crap day and feel like slapping some of these posters.
My kid has some of these issues. The classroom has been cleared because of him. Do you know what we had to do in order to get him an appropriate placement where he is thriving? I'll tell you:
Thousands upon thousands of dollars of therapy, not including the amount of lost work/salary for me. I don't work anymore because it's too hard to manage.
At least 6 meetings with school a year, daily phone calls, IEP meetings, IEP revisions, FBAs/BIPs, etc. private testing. Daily phone call complaints from incompetent teachers, psychologists who told me "you don't seem to care about your kid (she got fired)," and a whole host of garbage comments from other parents.
Advocate and lawyer to help us through the process.
I had to have therapists who were baiting my child removed from the process after they admitted to baiting him to acting out.
More advocate and lawyer costs to get him into his correct placement, where he's thriving and doing very well.
And he's only in second grade. That's right, all of this and he's 7. This is a lifelong process for us. We'll do it again next year, and the year after, and the year after.
You know what I have to be able to do this: Time and Money. A lot of people don't have time and money to do these things. People can't quit their jobs to go to therapy. People can't pay lawyers and advocates to help them. We can and we're fortunate. I go to Special Ed group meetings near me and people are begging for help--they can't afford it, can't take time off, have trauma in their lives, etc.
Yes, some people ignore the problems until it's too late, or don't want their kid labeled, but I really believe that most people are doing the best they can, and, in some cases, they're relying on the school to help them through the process. You can't rely on them. You need need outside help and assistance and a lot of people can't afford that.
I don't want your kid to get his hand slammed in the door, or to have to evacuate the classroom. IT's not fair to any of the kids. But I also hate that this topic comes up once a week on this site and people don't seem to understand the other side of it. The lack of empathy for people on these threads is disgusting.
So I have an idea for you: Go use your voice to vote for candidates that support all aspects of public education, voice your concerns to your school board and principals, work for additional funding for schools, stop bitching about property taxes on your million dollar homes and then complain that we don't have enough aides for the SN kids. Stop thinking that parents aren't doing the best they can. Find some empathy for people who don't fit in the molds. Life is hard enough.
Everyone - please read this post!
Elementary teacher here in a "good" school.
OP, in my experience most of the cases are like this. A child acts out and the parents of the child are going crazy trying to help the child and figure out what's wrong. They are begging the administration and the teachers for help. Usually the administration thinks whatever is happening will pass and leave it up to the teachers to handle. Some of my colleagues are terrific and will come up with behavior plans and strategies on their own. The rest will overreact or under-react, or lose their own shit and make things worse. We have a few younger teachers with anxiety and OCD type issues, and instead of ignoring small, unimportant behaviors like fidgeting they will pick and pick at a child who they know has emotional challenges until the child explodes.
Believe me that 99 percent of cases of young children who act like this can be managed by a good teacher with good strategies. Sometimes they need another hand temporarily. In 15 years of teaching, I have seen only a small number of kids who need a different environment. They exist but they are not common.
One thing the administration might try is to try to move a child to be with a different teacher. It does work in some cases. When it doesn't it could mean the child is too far gone emotionally and does not trust anyone at that point or it could mean the child needs a different school. It takes a long time to figure that out. I have taught kids who looked like they might need this but then the next year, with a different teacher and more time, it is clear they will succeed in general education.
It is horrible your child is going through this, OP, but I hope you will read through these threads to get the perspective from the other family and other teachers in the building.
At our school they also isolate the kids. All the kids except one or two will be sitting in groups and they will have desks alone. Its pretty terrible.
I have seen this too and wonder how this happens. Awful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These threads make me so angry and rage cry. I've had a crap day and feel like slapping some of these posters.
My kid has some of these issues. The classroom has been cleared because of him. Do you know what we had to do in order to get him an appropriate placement where he is thriving? I'll tell you:
Thousands upon thousands of dollars of therapy, not including the amount of lost work/salary for me. I don't work anymore because it's too hard to manage.
At least 6 meetings with school a year, daily phone calls, IEP meetings, IEP revisions, FBAs/BIPs, etc. private testing. Daily phone call complaints from incompetent teachers, psychologists who told me "you don't seem to care about your kid (she got fired)," and a whole host of garbage comments from other parents.
Advocate and lawyer to help us through the process.
I had to have therapists who were baiting my child removed from the process after they admitted to baiting him to acting out.
More advocate and lawyer costs to get him into his correct placement, where he's thriving and doing very well.
And he's only in second grade. That's right, all of this and he's 7. This is a lifelong process for us. We'll do it again next year, and the year after, and the year after.
You know what I have to be able to do this: Time and Money. A lot of people don't have time and money to do these things. People can't quit their jobs to go to therapy. People can't pay lawyers and advocates to help them. We can and we're fortunate. I go to Special Ed group meetings near me and people are begging for help--they can't afford it, can't take time off, have trauma in their lives, etc.
Yes, some people ignore the problems until it's too late, or don't want their kid labeled, but I really believe that most people are doing the best they can, and, in some cases, they're relying on the school to help them through the process. You can't rely on them. You need need outside help and assistance and a lot of people can't afford that.
I don't want your kid to get his hand slammed in the door, or to have to evacuate the classroom. IT's not fair to any of the kids. But I also hate that this topic comes up once a week on this site and people don't seem to understand the other side of it. The lack of empathy for people on these threads is disgusting.
So I have an idea for you: Go use your voice to vote for candidates that support all aspects of public education, voice your concerns to your school board and principals, work for additional funding for schools, stop bitching about property taxes on your million dollar homes and then complain that we don't have enough aides for the SN kids. Stop thinking that parents aren't doing the best they can. Find some empathy for people who don't fit in the molds. Life is hard enough.
I have empathy and I feel very badly for you, I really do, but my child has started seeing tutors to help with reading and math because she's basically not being taught these subjects due to being in a class with not one, but two disruptive students and only one teacher and one aide. On top of that, all the attention spent on those kids means that other children are acting up more than normal and my child has a classmate constantly picking on and bothering her, and it has seriously impacted her ability to learn, her level of anxiety, and her love of school. We're also considering sending her to a psychologist to help with the anxiety issues. And yes, I've complained and documented and complained some more but apparently there's nothing the school can do for my child who was doing GREAT for two years before being put in this class with children the teachers can't handle. I really don't think this is fair to my child either, and has potentially long-term impacts on my child's mental health and well-being. You are not the ONLY one suffering.
This has nothing to do with one child. Your child is having tutors as they are struggling and probably also need assessed. Your child having anxiety probably is genetic or also something else going on. If its that bad ,send her to private. You don't get that these parents are doing the best they can and many are not equip to handle these indues and honestly, it doesn't sound like you can if you have to get tutors for a young child vs. working with them AND you are ignoring your child mental health.
Two sides to this and both have legitimate points of view. My child was in a class that was evacuated every few weeks in two different grades. I never even heard about it from her but a few parents mentioned it to me and I saw it happen once while volunteering. Not one of the kids seemed visibly upset. The evacuation was really quick and they just went to another classroom to continue the lesson. This was early elementary so it gave the kids a movement break and they continued with their lesson and were moved back into their classroom in about 5 minutes after another adult was able to come down and help the child who was upset.
DD has a friend with anxiety, and, her parents discovered a few years later, a learning disability. This situation was very difficult for her and the parents initially were in denial and blamed their DD's not being able to learn on the upset child. They did move her to a different classroom but found she was still struggling academically. This was about HER issue, not the other child's issue.
Public school is chaotic my friend and your child will encounter behavioral issues throughout K-12 so if this is making your child struggle you do have a right to bring it up with the administration but just know most students do fine with these disruptions.