Anonymous wrote:I had this happen a few weeks ago. My child went to school (fine) and came home with a fever of 103 which spiked to 105. Was out a couple of days with the flu. She had gone to the nurse early in the day and they sent her back to class. She had two tests, both of which she failed. Then she went back to the nurse who finally called me.
It sucks - but when my daughter reached out, the teachers didn't seem to care. Hopefully it was just one grade and doesn't pull everything down.
Anonymous wrote:My high schooler came home yesterday with a 102 degree fever--completely out of it and crawled into bed at 3pm an slept until 9pm. I took the kid's temperature (was working from home).
He/she took a quiz last period yesterday and bombed it. There are minimal grades in the class and a previous high A quarter grade has dropped to a B.
I know he/she knew the material but was literally not in his right mind with the fever. She/he is home sick today and is really upset about this.
Should the kid say something? She/he says no (the school has no retakes) but I say yes. How would you approach this?
Anonymous wrote:Your kid is in high school. He can choose whether to ask about it or not.
Anonymous wrote:My high schooler came home yesterday with a 102 degree fever--completely out of it and crawled into bed at 3pm an slept until 9pm. I took the kid's temperature (was working from home).
He/she took a quiz last period yesterday and bombed it. There are minimal grades in the class and a previous high A quarter grade has dropped to a B.
I know he/she knew the material but was literally not in his right mind with the fever. She/he is home sick today and is really upset about this.
Should the kid say something? She/he says no (the school has no retakes) but I say yes. How would you approach this?
Anonymous wrote:I had this happen a few weeks ago. My child went to school (fine) and came home with a fever of 103 which spiked to 105. Was out a couple of days with the flu. She had gone to the nurse early in the day and they sent her back to class. She had two tests, both of which she failed. Then she went back to the nurse who finally called me.
It sucks - but when my daughter reached out, the teachers didn't seem to care. Hopefully it was just one grade and doesn't pull everything down.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thx for the thoughts. I think I may email the kid's advisor as the advisor has been a great resource for a similar question in the past. And for those keeping track, i did not revel the gender. (Those are other posts from other people--although i agree that it doesn't matter).
Anonymous wrote:My high schooler came home yesterday with a 102 degree fever--completely out of it and crawled into bed at 3pm an slept until 9pm. I took the kid's temperature (was working from home).
He/she took a quiz last period yesterday and bombed it. There are minimal grades in the class and a previous high A quarter grade has dropped to a B.
I know he/she knew the material but was literally not in his right mind with the fever. She/he is home sick today and is really upset about this.
Should the kid say something? She/he says no (the school has no retakes) but I say yes. How would you approach this?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thx for the thoughts. I think I may email the kid's advisor as the advisor has been a great resource for a similar question in the past. And for those keeping track, i did not revel the gender. (Those are other posts from other people--although i agree that it doesn't matter).
Anonymous wrote:My high schooler came home yesterday with a 102 degree fever--completely out of it and crawled into bed at 3pm an slept until 9pm. I took the kid's temperature (was working from home).
He/she took a quiz last period yesterday and bombed it. There are minimal grades in the class and a previous high A quarter grade has dropped to a B.
I know he/she knew the material but was literally not in his right mind with the fever. She/he is home sick today and is really upset about this.
Should the kid say something? She/he says no (the school has no retakes) but I say yes. How would you approach this?