Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any school that receives public funding has to make sure children with IEPs can be accommodated on field trips. For children who may be disruptive that often means a parent comes or a school staff member is assigned to that child (and possibly others).
I have never heard of a public or private school having field trips without a teacher. Is this a group of people home schooling?
The school cannot require a parent to come on the field trip wit a SN child. The child cannot be excluded from the field trip. Just FYI.
Would this apply if the child doesn't have an IEP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any school that receives public funding has to make sure children with IEPs can be accommodated on field trips. For children who may be disruptive that often means a parent comes or a school staff member is assigned to that child (and possibly others).
I have never heard of a public or private school having field trips without a teacher. Is this a group of people home schooling?
The school cannot require a parent to come on the field trip wit a SN child. The child cannot be excluded from the field trip. Just FYI.
Anonymous wrote:Any school that receives public funding has to make sure children with IEPs can be accommodated on field trips. For children who may be disruptive that often means a parent comes or a school staff member is assigned to that child (and possibly others).
I have never heard of a public or private school having field trips without a teacher. Is this a group of people home schooling?
Anonymous wrote:The mother express concerns about the meds being administered late due to the field trip.
Well, this could be your answer. For example, if the child normally got a booster at lunch and did not get it until after the field trip, that could be why the behavior was so off. And in fairness to the teacher, if he/she hasn't seen the child when they didn't get their meds at the right time, they may not have realized what a problem it would be.
I have a child with severe ADHD. Her first grade teacher didn't really believe us, until the day DH forgot to give her the medication in the morning before school. By 9:30 she was in the office, and the teacher said, "OK, now I get it!"
I always volunteer for field trips like this whether it is school or scouts because she needs constant 1-1 supervision. She is fast and impulsive. I would never expect another parent to be able to give her that type of supervision, especially if she did not get her meds on time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly? The teacher should have taken that kid. It's not fair to ask a regular parent volunteer to deal with kids who (for whatever reason) can't follow the rules.
Agree. It is not fair to have a parent chaperon. At our school, it's usually the SN teacher or teacher who chaperons unless the parent of the child can volunteer.
The class is doing a bunch of small group field trips, so no teacher was there.
Anonymous wrote:How come he was only severely disruptive in your second post, when the thread wasn't going the way you expected?
The mother express concerns about the meds being administered late due to the field trip.