Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok. How do you know which teachers have the inclusion classes so you can request that your kid be placed with a different teacher from the start of the year?
You can easily tell by who’s in the class. A lot of low kids and behavioral issues.
You can also tell by if there's a SPED teacher in the classroom for a lot of the school day (and at back-to-school nights, open houses, etc.).
I realized that my kid was assigned to the SPED class only after the back-to-school night. This was three weeks after the school year started and too late to request classroom change. I also thought that the assignment might not differ much from other classrooms (I really have no issues whatsoever with integration of SPED students), but the school year was a complete disaster compared to everything we experienced before. Whether it was overwhelmed or untrained teacher or a really difficult combination of students, the drama was never ending. At this school, and under the same circumstances, I would strongly recommend avoiding gened assignments to the SPED classroom and complete overhaul of the management of the SPED program. There has to be a reason why some schools are capable of providing thriving integration of SPED and gened students, while others end up with a big mess.
Big gross to calling it the "SPED class". Sometimes this forum really shows people for who they really are, and it's ugly. I don't know who you are, but I hope you take some time to reflect on why you feel the need to say things like this.
And what is it called? Is SPED not official acronym? Please do explain since I do not understand why SPED term is offensive.
To me a special ed classroom is a self contained classroom. People here are talking about Gen Ed, ESOL and AAP classrooms that have students who are also Special Ed. I would not call those Special Ed classrooms. I might say inclusion (but the way that FCPS does it, it isn't really inclusion either). By calling them SPED classrooms they are defining the entire class by a minority of the students that are in those classrooms.Anonymous wrote:I honestly was not aware of that. So you would say “SE classroom”? Similar to having gened, ESOL and AAP acronyms?Anonymous wrote:It is not an acronym. If it were, it would just be SE. It is frequently used by people to describe people in a derogatory way. It becomes offensive because people use it in an offensive manner. Similar to saying "short bus".Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok. How do you know which teachers have the inclusion classes so you can request that your kid be placed with a different teacher from the start of the year?
You can easily tell by who’s in the class. A lot of low kids and behavioral issues.
You can also tell by if there's a SPED teacher in the classroom for a lot of the school day (and at back-to-school nights, open houses, etc.).
I realized that my kid was assigned to the SPED class only after the back-to-school night. This was three weeks after the school year started and too late to request classroom change. I also thought that the assignment might not differ much from other classrooms (I really have no issues whatsoever with integration of SPED students), but the school year was a complete disaster compared to everything we experienced before. Whether it was overwhelmed or untrained teacher or a really difficult combination of students, the drama was never ending. At this school, and under the same circumstances, I would strongly recommend avoiding gened assignments to the SPED classroom and complete overhaul of the management of the SPED program. There has to be a reason why some schools are capable of providing thriving integration of SPED and gened students, while others end up with a big mess.
Big gross to calling it the "SPED class". Sometimes this forum really shows people for who they really are, and it's ugly. I don't know who you are, but I hope you take some time to reflect on why you feel the need to say things like this.
And what is it called? Is SPED not official acronym? Please do explain since I do not understand why SPED term is offensive.
Anonymous wrote:As a Sped parent with a kid in 7th grade, I can tell you that all our ES years were in a variety of classrooms and the sped kids were spread out. Not every sped kid has the same needs. I can guarantee you that my SPED kid behaves infinitely better than your GenED kid. I can also guarantee she's kinder, more thoughtful and a better classroom citizen than most. Her learning disabilities are not causing any disruptions to your snow flake's experience.
I honestly was not aware of that. So you would say “SE classroom”? Similar to having gened, ESOL and AAP acronyms?Anonymous wrote:It is not an acronym. If it were, it would just be SE. It is frequently used by people to describe people in a derogatory way. It becomes offensive because people use it in an offensive manner. Similar to saying "short bus".Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok. How do you know which teachers have the inclusion classes so you can request that your kid be placed with a different teacher from the start of the year?
You can easily tell by who’s in the class. A lot of low kids and behavioral issues.
You can also tell by if there's a SPED teacher in the classroom for a lot of the school day (and at back-to-school nights, open houses, etc.).
I realized that my kid was assigned to the SPED class only after the back-to-school night. This was three weeks after the school year started and too late to request classroom change. I also thought that the assignment might not differ much from other classrooms (I really have no issues whatsoever with integration of SPED students), but the school year was a complete disaster compared to everything we experienced before. Whether it was overwhelmed or untrained teacher or a really difficult combination of students, the drama was never ending. At this school, and under the same circumstances, I would strongly recommend avoiding gened assignments to the SPED classroom and complete overhaul of the management of the SPED program. There has to be a reason why some schools are capable of providing thriving integration of SPED and gened students, while others end up with a big mess.
Big gross to calling it the "SPED class". Sometimes this forum really shows people for who they really are, and it's ugly. I don't know who you are, but I hope you take some time to reflect on why you feel the need to say things like this.
And what is it called? Is SPED not official acronym? Please do explain since I do not understand why SPED term is offensive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok. How do you know which teachers have the inclusion classes so you can request that your kid be placed with a different teacher from the start of the year?
You can easily tell by who’s in the class. A lot of low kids and behavioral issues.
You can also tell by if there's a SPED teacher in the classroom for a lot of the school day (and at back-to-school nights, open houses, etc.).
I realized that my kid was assigned to the SPED class only after the back-to-school night. This was three weeks after the school year started and too late to request classroom change. I also thought that the assignment might not differ much from other classrooms (I really have no issues whatsoever with integration of SPED students), but the school year was a complete disaster compared to everything we experienced before. Whether it was overwhelmed or untrained teacher or a really difficult combination of students, the drama was never ending. At this school, and under the same circumstances, I would strongly recommend avoiding gened assignments to the SPED classroom and complete overhaul of the management of the SPED program. There has to be a reason why some schools are capable of providing thriving integration of SPED and gened students, while others end up with a big mess.
Big gross to calling it the "SPED class". Sometimes this forum really shows people for who they really are, and it's ugly. I don't know who you are, but I hope you take some time to reflect on why you feel the need to say things like this.
And what is it called? Is SPED not official acronym? Please do explain since I do not understand why SPED term is offensive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher, I don’t know which SPED group I will get. Nor do I know which teacher will get the SPED groups we had this year.
It sounds like you have a bad principal. The teachers with either the most experience or the most relevant backgrounds (we have two with masters in special education who prefer to be classroom teachers) get those classes every year when possible. First year teachers never get them unless there will be a specialist permanently assigned to the class.
It is not an acronym. If it were, it would just be SE. It is frequently used by people to describe people in a derogatory way. It becomes offensive because people use it in an offensive manner. Similar to saying "short bus".Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok. How do you know which teachers have the inclusion classes so you can request that your kid be placed with a different teacher from the start of the year?
You can easily tell by who’s in the class. A lot of low kids and behavioral issues.
You can also tell by if there's a SPED teacher in the classroom for a lot of the school day (and at back-to-school nights, open houses, etc.).
I realized that my kid was assigned to the SPED class only after the back-to-school night. This was three weeks after the school year started and too late to request classroom change. I also thought that the assignment might not differ much from other classrooms (I really have no issues whatsoever with integration of SPED students), but the school year was a complete disaster compared to everything we experienced before. Whether it was overwhelmed or untrained teacher or a really difficult combination of students, the drama was never ending. At this school, and under the same circumstances, I would strongly recommend avoiding gened assignments to the SPED classroom and complete overhaul of the management of the SPED program. There has to be a reason why some schools are capable of providing thriving integration of SPED and gened students, while others end up with a big mess.
Big gross to calling it the "SPED class". Sometimes this forum really shows people for who they really are, and it's ugly. I don't know who you are, but I hope you take some time to reflect on why you feel the need to say things like this.
And what is it called? Is SPED not official acronym? Please do explain since I do not understand why SPED term is offensive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok. How do you know which teachers have the inclusion classes so you can request that your kid be placed with a different teacher from the start of the year?
You can easily tell by who’s in the class. A lot of low kids and behavioral issues.
You can also tell by if there's a SPED teacher in the classroom for a lot of the school day (and at back-to-school nights, open houses, etc.).
I realized that my kid was assigned to the SPED class only after the back-to-school night. This was three weeks after the school year started and too late to request classroom change. I also thought that the assignment might not differ much from other classrooms (I really have no issues whatsoever with integration of SPED students), but the school year was a complete disaster compared to everything we experienced before. Whether it was overwhelmed or untrained teacher or a really difficult combination of students, the drama was never ending. At this school, and under the same circumstances, I would strongly recommend avoiding gened assignments to the SPED classroom and complete overhaul of the management of the SPED program. There has to be a reason why some schools are capable of providing thriving integration of SPED and gened students, while others end up with a big mess.
Big gross to calling it the "SPED class". Sometimes this forum really shows people for who they really are, and it's ugly. I don't know who you are, but I hope you take some time to reflect on why you feel the need to say things like this.
And what is it called? Is SPED not official acronym? Please do explain since I do not understand why SPED term is offensive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok. How do you know which teachers have the inclusion classes so you can request that your kid be placed with a different teacher from the start of the year?
You can easily tell by who’s in the class. A lot of low kids and behavioral issues.
You can also tell by if there's a SPED teacher in the classroom for a lot of the school day (and at back-to-school nights, open houses, etc.).
I realized that my kid was assigned to the SPED class only after the back-to-school night. This was three weeks after the school year started and too late to request classroom change. I also thought that the assignment might not differ much from other classrooms (I really have no issues whatsoever with integration of SPED students), but the school year was a complete disaster compared to everything we experienced before. Whether it was overwhelmed or untrained teacher or a really difficult combination of students, the drama was never ending. At this school, and under the same circumstances, I would strongly recommend avoiding gened assignments to the SPED classroom and complete overhaul of the management of the SPED program. There has to be a reason why some schools are capable of providing thriving integration of SPED and gened students, while others end up with a big mess.
Big gross to calling it the "SPED class". Sometimes this forum really shows people for who they really are, and it's ugly. I don't know who you are, but I hope you take some time to reflect on why you feel the need to say things like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher, I don’t know which SPED group I will get. Nor do I know which teacher will get the SPED groups we had this year.
It sounds like you have a bad principal. The teachers with either the most experience or the most relevant backgrounds (we have two with masters in special education who prefer to be classroom teachers) get those classes every year when possible. First year teachers never get them unless there will be a specialist permanently assigned to the class.
Your school make-up is not the same as everyone else’s. We don’t have teachers with Masters in Special education. Sometimes the veteran teacher doesn’t have the patience. Often times, there is a rotation to avoid teacher burn-out. And first years do get them, sometimes….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher, I don’t know which SPED group I will get. Nor do I know which teacher will get the SPED groups we had this year.
It sounds like you have a bad principal. The teachers with either the most experience or the most relevant backgrounds (we have two with masters in special education who prefer to be classroom teachers) get those classes every year when possible. First year teachers never get them unless there will be a specialist permanently assigned to the class.
Anonymous wrote:As a teacher, I don’t know which SPED group I will get. Nor do I know which teacher will get the SPED groups we had this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok. How do you know which teachers have the inclusion classes so you can request that your kid be placed with a different teacher from the start of the year?
You can easily tell by who’s in the class. A lot of low kids and behavioral issues.
You can also tell by if there's a SPED teacher in the classroom for a lot of the school day (and at back-to-school nights, open houses, etc.).
I realized that my kid was assigned to the SPED class only after the back-to-school night. This was three weeks after the school year started and too late to request classroom change. I also thought that the assignment might not differ much from other classrooms (I really have no issues whatsoever with integration of SPED students), but the school year was a complete disaster compared to everything we experienced before. Whether it was overwhelmed or untrained teacher or a really difficult combination of students, the drama was never ending. At this school, and under the same circumstances, I would strongly recommend avoiding gened assignments to the SPED classroom and complete overhaul of the management of the SPED program. There has to be a reason why some schools are capable of providing thriving integration of SPED and gened students, while others end up with a big mess.