Anonymous wrote:Why would a 13 or 14 year old, an immature one at that, get to make any decision like this? It's asinine. My husband's father sent him away to boarding school for 9th grade and my husband vowed to never speak to his dad again. He refused to go blah blah. A week into boarding school he realized it was the most amazing opportunity and loved his dad for sending him. Kids are dumb, kids are emotional, kids can't fathom making new friends. Kids don't get to make decisions like this, ADULTS do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would a 13 or 14 year old, an immature one at that, get to make any decision like this? It's asinine. My husband's father sent him away to boarding school for 9th grade and my husband vowed to never speak to his dad again. He refused to go blah blah. A week into boarding school he realized it was the most amazing opportunity and loved his dad for sending him. Kids are dumb, kids are emotional, kids can't fathom making new friends. Kids don't get to make decisions like this, ADULTS do.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Why would a 13 or 14 year old, an immature one at that, get to make any decision like this? It's asinine. My husband's father sent him away to boarding school for 9th grade and my husband vowed to never speak to his dad again. He refused to go blah blah. A week into boarding school he realized it was the most amazing opportunity and loved his dad for sending him. Kids are dumb, kids are emotional, kids can't fathom making new friends. Kids don't get to make decisions like this, ADULTS do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If he decides to stay in public, then I would spend money on executive function tutors or whatever he needs to be successful
OP here, we were just discussing this. Answer to the question about his grades, his grades are Bs-Es with A TON of support from us. he would likely get all Ds & Es if we didn't provide a ton of scaffolding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If he decides to stay in public, then I would spend money on executive function tutors or whatever he needs to be successful
OP here, we were just discussing this. Answer to the question about his grades, his grades are Bs-Es with A TON of support from us. he would likely get all Ds & Es if we didn't provide a ton of scaffolding.
Anonymous wrote:Private. Hands down. He will thank you later. I promise.
We know several kids who did this and they were all much happier by half way through freshman year. It was a huge win for each one of them. It seems scary to him right now but the pain is fleeting.
Anonymous wrote:Op, suggest you post in the kids with special needs forum.
My younger DC has ADHD and the best thing we every did was move them to private school (mainstream) from public. Not sure if you have another child in private, but the level of feedback and support is so much better than public. It’s not only that the school admin/teachers were helpful with DC, it was that the communication and investment in my child meant that we (parents) could support them better.
My DC doesn’t need a private school which focuses on ADHD but if their mainstream school wasn’t working, would move them in a heartbeat. Kids spend too many hours on school to then feel like they are failing.
Also, particularly if your child isn’t that academically driven, the ability to play basketball and shine at something is great for their self-esteem.
Perhaps you could ask your DC to at least try the new school for a year, and make concete plans to make sure they see their old friends. My oldest DC went to a k-8 and they all scattered for high school but DC still hangs out with friends from k-8 — phones/social media make staying in touch easier now.