Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I taught third grade for 15 years, and I absolutely believe that a third grader with ADHD could remember an interaction like this with detail. Kids with ADHD or LDs often have incredible memory in certain domains.
The rest of the class is also affected by this interaction, so the principal definitely needs to get involved.
Still not convinced. My daughter with ADHD, same age, absolutely recalls things in a way that make her seem like the aggrieved victim when the truth is anything but. Nobody is saying ignore and disbelieve, rather, get all the information first before demanding apologies and other drastic moves.
Was just coming to post the same thing. My adhd kid, always comes up with elaborate stories where they are the victim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:100 I can see this happening- teacher with over 20 years experience.
My question to OP is what do you want ? Do you want to punish the teacher? Or do you want to help them understand the impact that this had on your daughter, and what an important figure the teacher is in your daughter’s daily life? This person has a significant impact on your daughter’s day to day! I hope you can help them understand that this action really hurt your daughter and you want to repair the relationship. That goes two ways- can you forgive this teacher for this terrible decision? and work with them for your daughters future success?
Also, what are you going to do to help your child in school. If this story is true (probably not) the kid is obviously distracting and disruptive to the rest of the class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - While the situation may seem unbelievable, it actually happened. My daughter has no frame of reference to make up such a situation. And I don't know if the teacher left her class unsupervised. Thank you PPs with the advice about speaking with the principal and teacher and requesting an apology. I will definitely be pursuing those ideas.
Your daughter can't follow simple instructions but can remember with precise detail this fantastic story? Do you often get played by your daughter?
Anonymous wrote:Is the ADHD relevant to the issue in this instance?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:100 I can see this happening- teacher with over 20 years experience.
My question to OP is what do you want ? Do you want to punish the teacher? Or do you want to help them understand the impact that this had on your daughter, and what an important figure the teacher is in your daughter’s daily life? This person has a significant impact on your daughter’s day to day! I hope you can help them understand that this action really hurt your daughter and you want to repair the relationship. That goes two ways- can you forgive this teacher for this terrible decision? and work with them for your daughters future success?
Not OP, but a teacher with this little emotional intelligence and empathy should not be working with children. She should be fired.
Anonymous wrote:100 I can see this happening- teacher with over 20 years experience.
My question to OP is what do you want ? Do you want to punish the teacher? Or do you want to help them understand the impact that this had on your daughter, and what an important figure the teacher is in your daughter’s daily life? This person has a significant impact on your daughter’s day to day! I hope you can help them understand that this action really hurt your daughter and you want to repair the relationship. That goes two ways- can you forgive this teacher for this terrible decision? and work with them for your daughters future success?
Anonymous wrote:THAT HAPPENED BELIEVE It ,BELIEVE TO YOUR CHILD, SUPPORT HER!!!!
Anonymous wrote:THAT HAPPENED BELIEVE It ,BELIEVE TO YOUR CHILD, SUPPORT HER!!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 3rd grader has ADHD and we're in the process of establishing an IEP. There was an incident last week where she was given a classroom assignment, but did not complete it because she didn't understand the concept. And when the teacher tried to explain it to her, she still wasn't quite getting it. At that moment, the teacher gets her out of her seat and says "looks like you need to go back to kindergarten." This is done in front of the class, so she's embarrassed. And then the 3rd grade teacher ushers her down to a kindergarten class and tells the kindergarten teacher that she can't help my daughter, which embarrassed her further in front of the kindergarteners. I was mortified when my daughter shared this story. I'm awaiting a meeting with the principal to discuss what happened. In the meantime, any thoughts around how to keep her out of a situation where she's clearly not being supported educationally? For what it's worth, her ADHD is a formal diagnosis on file with the school.
This is rather detailed to be believable
Good point. It is an interesting amount of detail from a parent who wasn't there. I call troll.
Totally agree.
Anonymous wrote:100 I can see this happening- teacher with over 20 years experience.
My question to OP is what do you want ? Do you want to punish the teacher? Or do you want to help them understand the impact that this had on your daughter, and what an important figure the teacher is in your daughter’s daily life? This person has a significant impact on your daughter’s day to day! I hope you can help them understand that this action really hurt your daughter and you want to repair the relationship. That goes two ways- can you forgive this teacher for this terrible decision? and work with them for your daughters future success?