Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you are doing your kid a huge disservice by pulling your kid out of school weekly for PT. Find another PT office that has late hours or weekend hours. You sound like an a-hole
Seriously?
I'm starting to think half this thread has no clue what PT actually is for a pediatric patient following a broken leg.
This is not akin to an athlete with some knee pain, this is truly medically necessary. Poor girl's not done growing, that leg needs to heal right or it could cause a lifetime of problems.
I am very familiar and it has been at least 3 months. Kid just needs to use her leg already.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you are doing your kid a huge disservice by pulling your kid out of school weekly for PT. Find another PT office that has late hours or weekend hours. You sound like an a-hole
Seriously?
I'm starting to think half this thread has no clue what PT actually is for a pediatric patient following a broken leg.
This is not akin to an athlete with some knee pain, this is truly medically necessary. Poor girl's not done growing, that leg needs to heal right or it could cause a lifetime of problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you are doing your kid a huge disservice by pulling your kid out of school weekly for PT. Find another PT office that has late hours or weekend hours. You sound like an a-hole
Seriously?
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are doing your kid a huge disservice by pulling your kid out of school weekly for PT. Find another PT office that has late hours or weekend hours. You sound like an a-hole
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are doing your kid a huge disservice by pulling your kid out of school weekly for PT. Find another PT office that has late hours or weekend hours. You sound like an a-hole
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not pull my child from school for PT. Get he exercises and do them at home. That's absurd to miss school for PT. No excuse for being late unless you have a doctor's note. I'd really try to attend school from now until the end of the year. In public school, a certain percentage of tardiness and absences warrants a CPS call and a school meeting. It can be a sign of many things going on at home. I'd really do a better job of making school a priority.
How can anyone be this stupid? PT is a medical absence. It absolutely does not warrant a CPS call in a public school unless they want a lawsuit.
You live in a bubble. Kids not attending school regularly and missing a large percentage of school is absolutely a red flag. Now with a doctor's note, that's a different story. PT can be done on weekends and before/ after school. It might not be the most convenient but can be done sorry.
She has notes for each late arrival and early dismissal! Why do people keep assuming she doesn't? Also, when this started, we were scheduled four months out and STILL couldn't get those desirable 4 pm slots.
Anonymous wrote:First, I'm sure this was very traumatic for your daughter (and you) and I hope she is getting better.
Maybe they just want to discuss her missing assignments or how you can catch her up on things?
I assume this is ES. I can't imagine it's that much of an issue. And I'm guessing she's not going to be in PT forever.
I really easily get myself worked up about this kind of stuff, and it may not be as serious as you are thinking. I can't imagine they are counselling you out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not pull my child from school for PT. Get he exercises and do them at home. That's absurd to miss school for PT. No excuse for being late unless you have a doctor's note. I'd really try to attend school from now until the end of the year. In public school, a certain percentage of tardiness and absences warrants a CPS call and a school meeting. It can be a sign of many things going on at home. I'd really do a better job of making school a priority.
How can anyone be this stupid? PT is a medical absence. It absolutely does not warrant a CPS call in a public school unless they want a lawsuit.
You live in a bubble. Kids not attending school regularly and missing a large percentage of school is absolutely a red flag. Now with a doctor's note, that's a different story. PT can be done on weekends and before/ after school. It might not be the most convenient but can be done sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not pull my child from school for PT. Get he exercises and do them at home. That's absurd to miss school for PT. No excuse for being late unless you have a doctor's note. I'd really try to attend school from now until the end of the year. In public school, a certain percentage of tardiness and absences warrants a CPS call and a school meeting. It can be a sign of many things going on at home. I'd really do a better job of making school a priority.
How can anyone be this stupid? PT is a medical absence. It absolutely does not warrant a CPS call in a public school unless they want a lawsuit.
Anonymous wrote:I would not pull my child from school for PT. Get he exercises and do them at home. That's absurd to miss school for PT. No excuse for being late unless you have a doctor's note. I'd really try to attend school from now until the end of the year. In public school, a certain percentage of tardiness and absences warrants a CPS call and a school meeting. It can be a sign of many things going on at home. I'd really do a better job of making school a priority.