Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So this is where kids with adhd (inattentive type) begin being left behind by the school system. Good to know.
The teacher may not have even followed her own rule here! Did he ask 3? We don’t know, but he did ask 1! Building confidence in the classroom is so important in the early years. This is a bad teacher who may be teaching kids to be too afraid to go to the teacher for help in the later years.
Yep, exactly what’s happening to my son.
So get him evaluated for ADHD!
We already have, you idiot.
Then he has or will soon have accommodations and this post doesn’t apply to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:'NP here. Exactly— he had a real question & felt he couldn’t ask the teacher for help. My kid has a teacher who does this, and I think it’s lazy teaching at some point. Sure, there are things kids could legitimately ask a peer, but kids shouldn’t be relying on peers to teach them how to do the schoolwork. That is ridiculous. Also, my kid has gotten frustrated when the teacher won’t answer a question that clearly none of the kids can answer. It’s the teacher’s job to address kids’ legitimate questions."
+1000 percent
I think it’s brilliant. Teacher needs to teach and kid learns that when you don’t listen you have to figure it out on your own. If you don’t, the teacher will attend to you after she finishes with the kids who are where they are supposed to be and doing what they are supposed to be doing. Those kids don’t get short changed because of another kid’s misbehavior. And the misbehaving kid gets what he needs, just not on his timeframe. Hopefully lesson learned. Pay attention when the teacher tells you to listen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So this is where kids with adhd (inattentive type) begin being left behind by the school system. Good to know.
The teacher may not have even followed her own rule here! Did he ask 3? We don’t know, but he did ask 1! Building confidence in the classroom is so important in the early years. This is a bad teacher who may be teaching kids to be too afraid to go to the teacher for help in the later years.
Yep, exactly what’s happening to my son.
So get him evaluated for ADHD!
We already have, you idiot.
Anonymous wrote:If that’s the teachers rule, then kids shouldn’t be penalized for getting something wrong because a classmate gave them incorrect instructions.
Anonymous wrote:Not acceptable at that grade level. Teacher needs a better way to communicate with students. He should feel comfortable to ask questions at any time. She can say many things before her crazy rule of "3 before me".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So this is where kids with adhd (inattentive type) begin being left behind by the school system. Good to know.
The teacher may not have even followed her own rule here! Did he ask 3? We don’t know, but he did ask 1! Building confidence in the classroom is so important in the early years. This is a bad teacher who may be teaching kids to be too afraid to go to the teacher for help in the later years.
Yep, exactly what’s happening to my son.
So get him evaluated for ADHD!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So this is where kids with adhd (inattentive type) begin being left behind by the school system. Good to know.
The teacher may not have even followed her own rule here! Did he ask 3? We don’t know, but he did ask 1! Building confidence in the classroom is so important in the early years. This is a bad teacher who may be teaching kids to be too afraid to go to the teacher for help in the later years.
Yep, exactly what’s happening to my son.
Anonymous wrote:So this is where kids with adhd (inattentive type) begin being left behind by the school system. Good to know.
The teacher may not have even followed her own rule here! Did he ask 3? We don’t know, but he did ask 1! Building confidence in the classroom is so important in the early years. This is a bad teacher who may be teaching kids to be too afraid to go to the teacher for help in the later years.
Anonymous wrote:If that’s the teachers rule, then kids shouldn’t be penalized for getting something wrong because a classmate gave them incorrect instructions.
Anonymous wrote:If that’s the teachers rule, then kids shouldn’t be penalized for getting something wrong because a classmate gave them incorrect instructions.