Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Part of it is they’re trying to make you decide he’s not a fit. And it sounds like he’s not.
This. They can’t outright oust him so they are wearing you down in hopes to do it yourself. I point blank told our school that whatever they hope I will say to my child, we already say every single day, and I don’t want to be bothered about non-violent and minor things my child says.
Anonymous wrote:I disagree with the .ove to public crowd.
He will continue have social issues at public. No one will do anything about it at school but the kids will isolate and reject him. Public school will also let him slip through the cracks academically.
If I had to do it all over again with my audhd sons I would put both in small privates and put both in sports ASAP.
Teammates have looser social expectations and he will find acceptance more easily plus all the other benefits of sports.
Honestly a phone call or email is just their policy. Ask for a weekly report. If they accept it, read it over a glass of wine and have a laugh.
I mean really.. someone who had been left back a year was teasing him? Sounds like other kid learned a great lesson about throwing stones. And yes slaves were sold. Great opportunity to discuss with him and also talk about things that are political. He's only 10. One of what he's done has been remotely off the wall.
Don't let them chase you out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The certainly can oust him outright and may in fact be laying the groundwork to do so. Your DC isn't a fit with the school and it's time for you to make a change. You can be sure DC feels it. Why drag it out?
Sounds like a lawsuit waiting to happen. On what grounds?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a huge downside of private. They are not necessarily trying to get rid of your child but they will make you hyper aware of anything and everything. It is very stressful, but typical.
When our child moved to public, the silence of no phone calls was a sweet relief.
But in public you're dealing with the other end of that spectrum. There's very little accountability, communication, or engagement and next to no sense of goals or urgency. Not great either. Parents trade one type of stress for another.
Anonymous wrote:This is a huge downside of private. They are not necessarily trying to get rid of your child but they will make you hyper aware of anything and everything. It is very stressful, but typical.
When our child moved to public, the silence of no phone calls was a sweet relief.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old is he?
op - 10.
they emailed today to say he did something else hurtful and they would be calling to explain.
i dont mean to be defensive but part of me wants to just say - look why dont I come pick him up and we'll skip the rest of the week and you can all have a break and so can he.