Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am sorry this is so difficult. Sounds like the camp is not designed with all the staff needed to provide one on one support for your son, and attending the camp is something he can’t deal with yet. I can’t blame the camp - they have to respond when a student threatens to harm themselves.
Camp? This is MCPS summer school we're talking about.
Nice try.
I’m a different poster, but the same response goes. There are inpatient hospitals and other supports for a child that is not stable. Was this child taken to the crisis center?
My only real issue with how the teachers handled this is that they did not involve the crisis center.
I don't know if OP is a troll, but, I wonder about the story as presented. Teachers did not seem to be following procedure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am sorry this is so difficult. Sounds like the camp is not designed with all the staff needed to provide one on one support for your son, and attending the camp is something he can’t deal with yet. I can’t blame the camp - they have to respond when a student threatens to harm themselves.
Camp? This is MCPS summer school we're talking about.
Nice try.
I’m a different poster, but the same response goes. There are inpatient hospitals and other supports for a child that is not stable. Was this child taken to the crisis center?
My only real issue with how the teachers handled this is that they did not involve the crisis center.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here...the medication switch was from Adderall XR to Ritalin XR because DS was not eating on Adderall. That was it. Please do not assume that just because we are making a medication switch it was purely for direct treatment and not for addressing side effects of one medication.
Your child is suicidal. At 8. Your child needs more support than a summer school program can offer. Period.
10% of ES kids make suicidal statements. More make murderous statements. That's not the same as being suicidal.
Do you expect teachers to know how to handle multiple suicidal threats? This is not something they are trained for. And is not up to a teacher to decide whether a threat is real or not. That child should be taken to the crisis center.
How should MoCo handle those 10% of kids? MCPS doesn't have the resources.
MCPS actually has some excellent resources for kids with MH issues. But they aren’t in mainstream programs and definitely not in mainstream summer school.
MCPS doesn't have special placement options for the 10% of ES students who make suicidal statements. Nowhere close.
Not to hijack but really they do and my son was in one. It was excellent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here...the medication switch was from Adderall XR to Ritalin XR because DS was not eating on Adderall. That was it. Please do not assume that just because we are making a medication switch it was purely for direct treatment and not for addressing side effects of one medication.
Your child is suicidal. At 8. Your child needs more support than a summer school program can offer. Period.
10% of ES kids make suicidal statements. More make murderous statements. That's not the same as being suicidal.
Do you expect teachers to know how to handle multiple suicidal threats? This is not something they are trained for. And is not up to a teacher to decide whether a threat is real or not. That child should be taken to the crisis center.
How should MoCo handle those 10% of kids? MCPS doesn't have the resources.
MCPS actually has some excellent resources for kids with MH issues. But they aren’t in mainstream programs and definitely not in mainstream summer school.
MCPS doesn't have special placement options for the 10% of ES students who make suicidal statements. Nowhere close.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here...the medication switch was from Adderall XR to Ritalin XR because DS was not eating on Adderall. That was it. Please do not assume that just because we are making a medication switch it was purely for direct treatment and not for addressing side effects of one medication.
Changing stimulants for a kid with anxiety can be really dangerous - as you found out when your child started to make suicidal threats repeatedly at school. Many psychiatrists won’t even prescribe stimulants for kids with anxiety. You can downplay this all you want but this was not a minor medication modification for your child.
Anonymous wrote:OP here...the medication switch was from Adderall XR to Ritalin XR because DS was not eating on Adderall. That was it. Please do not assume that just because we are making a medication switch it was purely for direct treatment and not for addressing side effects of one medication.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here...the medication switch was from Adderall XR to Ritalin XR because DS was not eating on Adderall. That was it. Please do not assume that just because we are making a medication switch it was purely for direct treatment and not for addressing side effects of one medication.
Your child is suicidal. At 8. Your child needs more support than a summer school program can offer. Period.
10% of ES kids make suicidal statements. More make murderous statements. That's not the same as being suicidal.
Do you expect teachers to know how to handle multiple suicidal threats? This is not something they are trained for. And is not up to a teacher to decide whether a threat is real or not. That child should be taken to the crisis center.
How should MoCo handle those 10% of kids? MCPS doesn't have the resources.
MCPS actually has some excellent resources for kids with MH issues. But they aren’t in mainstream programs and definitely not in mainstream summer school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here...the medication switch was from Adderall XR to Ritalin XR because DS was not eating on Adderall. That was it. Please do not assume that just because we are making a medication switch it was purely for direct treatment and not for addressing side effects of one medication.
Your child is suicidal. At 8. Your child needs more support than a summer school program can offer. Period.
10% of ES kids make suicidal statements. More make murderous statements. That's not the same as being suicidal.
Do you expect teachers to know how to handle multiple suicidal threats? This is not something they are trained for. And is not up to a teacher to decide whether a threat is real or not. That child should be taken to the crisis center.
How should MoCo handle those 10% of kids? MCPS doesn't have the resources.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kid needs more support than summer school can offer if he's repeatedly threatening to kill himself. This is not typical behavior.
This. It sucks but it is true. And I just can't get up in arms. You want teachers to deal with this but they can't. They did the responsible thing by calling you. But now your kid knows if he threatens this he gets to go home so he is smart kid.
Anonymous wrote:Your kid needs more support than summer school can offer if he's repeatedly threatening to kill himself. This is not typical behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am sorry this is so difficult. Sounds like the camp is not designed with all the staff needed to provide one on one support for your son, and attending the camp is something he can’t deal with yet. I can’t blame the camp - they have to respond when a student threatens to harm themselves.
Camp? This is MCPS summer school we're talking about.
Nice try.