Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) You sound really tightly wound and so does your child. Take a deep breath. It's your anxiety and controlling nature talking. Unless your child has an LD or other kinds of special needs that would make them react abnormally to this situation they will be fine. 2) The teacher needs help. This is either because she's inexperienced or because the school is not helping her when she needs help. This is not on the students so stop fixating on them.
What the hell is this garbage response? OP does not sound "tightly wound".
It’s DCUM so there’s always some loony feeling slighted, maybe she has a kid with issues or she was that kid in the class and raw memories are rushing back. There’s also the fringe crowd that opposes any disciplinary action because it’s not equitable, so everything goes. But yeah, it’s quite crazy to blame the parent and the child for being “tightly wound”. Unreal!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) You sound really tightly wound and so does your child. Take a deep breath. It's your anxiety and controlling nature talking. Unless your child has an LD or other kinds of special needs that would make them react abnormally to this situation they will be fine. 2) The teacher needs help. This is either because she's inexperienced or because the school is not helping her when she needs help. This is not on the students so stop fixating on them.
What the hell is this garbage response? OP does not sound "tightly wound".
Anonymous wrote:That is not harrassment. I have not volunteered at my child's recess/lunch hours, but I can imagine it is loud and chaotic with many kids. They always ask for parent volunteers to help out. Except raising the concerns to school teachers/principal, or ask for the switch of seats or classroom, there's nothing much more parents can do for their being loud and screaming behaviors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) You sound really tightly wound and so does your child. Take a deep breath. It's your anxiety and controlling nature talking. Unless your child has an LD or other kinds of special needs that would make them react abnormally to this situation they will be fine. 2) The teacher needs help. This is either because she's inexperienced or because the school is not helping her when she needs help. This is not on the students so stop fixating on them.
What the hell is this garbage response? OP does not sound "tightly wound".
Anonymous wrote:1) You sound really tightly wound and so does your child. Take a deep breath. It's your anxiety and controlling nature talking. Unless your child has an LD or other kinds of special needs that would make them react abnormally to this situation they will be fine. 2) The teacher needs help. This is either because she's inexperienced or because the school is not helping her when she needs help. This is not on the students so stop fixating on them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. From talking to other parents that are unhappy with the class atmosphere at least 3 and I suspect all of the disrupting students have an IEP, ie learning disability. They are not the only students in the class on IEP, one of my child’s friends for example is very sweet, hard working and just always trying his best.
The reason this is relevant is that there is a school policy document that states students can’t be disciplined for a disability they have, but of course it’s difficult to say if the behavior is caused by the disability or it’s simply bad behavior that needs to be corrected. For example a student is diagnosed with lack of impulse control, so when he starts screaming is this a manifestation of the disability or he has a bad attitude? I could easily see how a disability can be cover for even the most egregious behavior.
Maybe this plays a role in the school not doing much about the situation, but there are lots of parents unhappy about it and thinking about changing schools.
If I heard that you were talking with other parents in the way you have spoken on this site I would find you a disgusting person and avoid. Anyone who gossips about kids with IEPs has no class. That is none of your business and it's completely false that students can't be disciplined for a disability. No school would ever have such a document.
On the off chance that some child with a disability has a stim that means the child screams regularly I cannot imagine that the IEP would not have a plan to remove the child from the classroom when that happens or to put him in a more supported class. Nothing in your post sounds true. You sound like a hateful and prejudice busy body with anxiety and control issues.
Not sure why you are on this thread. Apparently you know what’s happening in the classroom, how loud the kids are, the school policy, how each child is impacted by the disruptive behavior etc. I suspect you are the parent of a disruptive child and use this thread to justify your own bad choices in life. If that’s the case your input to this thread is not needed, feel free to check out. A therapy session would be the appropriate venue for that, perhaps the suggestion you made up thread was a Freudian slip.
There are kids with and without disabilities that are hurting other kids in their class. It can be physical bullying, verbal abuse, or, as in this case disruptive behavior that impacts their wellbeing and learning. Tolerating that behavior is in nobody’s interest, it is actually shortsighted because eventually those kids need to function in society with all the norms and expectations.
No one is being hurt even OP’s child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. From talking to other parents that are unhappy with the class atmosphere at least 3 and I suspect all of the disrupting students have an IEP, ie learning disability. They are not the only students in the class on IEP, one of my child’s friends for example is very sweet, hard working and just always trying his best.
The reason this is relevant is that there is a school policy document that states students can’t be disciplined for a disability they have, but of course it’s difficult to say if the behavior is caused by the disability or it’s simply bad behavior that needs to be corrected. For example a student is diagnosed with lack of impulse control, so when he starts screaming is this a manifestation of the disability or he has a bad attitude? I could easily see how a disability can be cover for even the most egregious behavior.
Maybe this plays a role in the school not doing much about the situation, but there are lots of parents unhappy about it and thinking about changing schools.
If I heard that you were talking with other parents in the way you have spoken on this site I would find you a disgusting person and avoid. Anyone who gossips about kids with IEPs has no class. That is none of your business and it's completely false that students can't be disciplined for a disability. No school would ever have such a document.
On the off chance that some child with a disability has a stim that means the child screams regularly I cannot imagine that the IEP would not have a plan to remove the child from the classroom when that happens or to put him in a more supported class. Nothing in your post sounds true. You sound like a hateful and prejudice busy body with anxiety and control issues.
Not sure why you are on this thread. Apparently you know what’s happening in the classroom, how loud the kids are, the school policy, how each child is impacted by the disruptive behavior etc. I suspect you are the parent of a disruptive child and use this thread to justify your own bad choices in life. If that’s the case your input to this thread is not needed, feel free to check out. A therapy session would be the appropriate venue for that, perhaps the suggestion you made up thread was a Freudian slip.
There are kids with and without disabilities that are hurting other kids in their class. It can be physical bullying, verbal abuse, or, as in this case disruptive behavior that impacts their wellbeing and learning. Tolerating that behavior is in nobody’s interest, it is actually shortsighted because eventually those kids need to function in society with all the norms and expectations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. From talking to other parents that are unhappy with the class atmosphere at least 3 and I suspect all of the disrupting students have an IEP, ie learning disability. They are not the only students in the class on IEP, one of my child’s friends for example is very sweet, hard working and just always trying his best.
The reason this is relevant is that there is a school policy document that states students can’t be disciplined for a disability they have, but of course it’s difficult to say if the behavior is caused by the disability or it’s simply bad behavior that needs to be corrected. For example a student is diagnosed with lack of impulse control, so when he starts screaming is this a manifestation of the disability or he has a bad attitude? I could easily see how a disability can be cover for even the most egregious behavior.
Maybe this plays a role in the school not doing much about the situation, but there are lots of parents unhappy about it and thinking about changing schools.
If I heard that you were talking with other parents in the way you have spoken on this site I would find you a disgusting person and avoid. Anyone who gossips about kids with IEPs has no class. That is none of your business and it's completely false that students can't be disciplined for a disability. No school would ever have such a document.
On the off chance that some child with a disability has a stim that means the child screams regularly I cannot imagine that the IEP would not have a plan to remove the child from the classroom when that happens or to put him in a more supported class. Nothing in your post sounds true. You sound like a hateful and prejudice busy body with anxiety and control issues.
Anonymous wrote:Do you know the parents? Is there any scenario where the parents are told? I'm in private and this would absolutely be something also talked about between the parents of the involved kids, not just you and the school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. From talking to other parents that are unhappy with the class atmosphere at least 3 and I suspect all of the disrupting students have an IEP, ie learning disability. They are not the only students in the class on IEP, one of my child’s friends for example is very sweet, hard working and just always trying his best.
The reason this is relevant is that there is a school policy document that states students can’t be disciplined for a disability they have, but of course it’s difficult to say if the behavior is caused by the disability or it’s simply bad behavior that needs to be corrected. For example a student is diagnosed with lack of impulse control, so when he starts screaming is this a manifestation of the disability or he has a bad attitude? I could easily see how a disability can be cover for even the most egregious behavior.
Maybe this plays a role in the school not doing much about the situation, but there are lots of parents unhappy about it and thinking about changing schools.
If I heard that you were talking with other parents in the way you have spoken on this site I would find you a disgusting person and avoid. Anyone who gossips about kids with IEPs has no class. That is none of your business and it's completely false that students can't be disciplined for a disability. No school would ever have such a document.
On the off chance that some child with a disability has a stim that means the child screams regularly I cannot imagine that the IEP would not have a plan to remove the child from the classroom when that happens or to put him in a more supported class. Nothing in your post sounds true. You sound like a hateful and prejudice busy body with anxiety and control issues.