Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since he is not considered special ed, why hasn't he been suspended or expelled?
This post is off. Surely a teacher couldn't be this incompetent. Troll?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since he is not considered special ed, why hasn't he been suspended or expelled?
This post is off. Surely a teacher couldn't be this incompetent. Troll?
Very ignorant of you. I can well believe this teacher, after witnessing rude and out-of-control behavior from kids that age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since he is not considered special ed, why hasn't he been suspended or expelled?
This post is off. Surely a teacher couldn't be this incompetent. Troll?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since he is not considered special ed, why hasn't he been suspended or expelled?
This post is off. Surely a teacher couldn't be this incompetent. Troll?
Anonymous wrote:Teacher, Calm down. You are upset at the wrong people. The problem is your school's administration. There are a lot of things they can do beyond the IEP process. You need to put a note into writing to your principal and cc the special needs office for your district. Explain the situation and tell them you need additional staffing to help with this issue and you need a consultation from a behavioral specialist who can help you with strategies to manage the child's behavior.
You should also look at what YOU are doing to trigger the behaviors if anything. I am not saying you are doing something wrong but you might be inadvertently upsetting the child.
Lastly, try to have some empathy. Your post comes off sounding kind of crazy. What kind of teacher would sue parents?
Anonymous wrote:Since he is not considered special ed, why hasn't he been suspended or expelled?
Anonymous wrote:You cannot sue the family. However, it sounds like you have a good case against the school system for not providing adequate support for the child. I would take it to the principal and then take it up. That is not acceptable.