Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"There doesn't seem to be any action"
How in the world would you know what action has or hasn't been taken?
My kid was that kid. BEGGED AND PLEADED for him to be removed to a special school. It never happened. By all means, bug the administration, I'm sure his parents don't want him to hurt other kids either.
It is a long, difficult process, but still much easier and faster if the child's parents are on board for getting help, but believe me, many parents are not, and then it is nearly impossible. You cannot force people to help their children, especially when they don't see a problem.
And, on the flip side, as frustrating as the red tape is, it is there to prevent knee jerk reactions that are harmful to children.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure non-SN parents know that there's been a trend in the last few years of school systems completely bucking special education law when it comes to severe children. Violent children are supposed to be put in a self-contained setting or with 1-to-1 adult supervision in the mainstream classroom. A behavior specialist is supposed to then collect detailed data on the triggers for the behaviors and then convene a meeting to create a plan to extinguish the behaviors. If none of this works, the school system is required to take the tax money distributed to it for that pupil and use it to send the child to an intensive private or residential placement designed for children with these needs.
School systems have figured out that it's a lot cheaper and easier to ignore all of the above, and wait for a parent to sue them for services. This hurts all children. There's this weird warped mindset on this board that parents somehow condone this occuring in classrooms, when the exact opposite has literally been written into law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"There doesn't seem to be any action"
How in the world would you know what action has or hasn't been taken?
My kid was that kid. BEGGED AND PLEADED for him to be removed to a special school. It never happened. By all means, bug the administration, I'm sure his parents don't want him to hurt other kids either.
NP but there have been no discernible results. When your kid is violent with other kids repeatedly, throwing up your hands and getting defensive doesn’t help.
OP, I’d get a group of parents together and create a huge paper trail. Get your school board rep involved. Create a stink. Be a pain in the a**.
Fight for your kid against this violent child.
Who is throwing their hands up? No one. You have no idea how hard we all have tried to get our kids help. By all means, OP should raise hell, but don't pretend we're all just over here like "welp, nbd, just gonna rest on my butt"
Don’t speak for the whole board. Most special need kids are not violent.
Anonymous wrote:[twitter]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"There doesn't seem to be any action"
How in the world would you know what action has or hasn't been taken?
My kid was that kid. BEGGED AND PLEADED for him to be removed to a special school. It never happened. By all means, bug the administration, I'm sure his parents don't want him to hurt other kids either.
what is his diagnosis?
I know there’s been no action because the student is in the classroom and my child continues to be hit.
Why would I tell you my kid's DX? You aren't a SN parent clearly.
Also - that doesn't mean there's been no action. Don't get me wrong, your kid being hit is completely unacceptable, but that doesn't mean the parents aren't doing anything.
NP—I don’t care if your kid’s diagnosis is that he’s a neon panda bear.
Stop acting like the violent nine-year-old is the victim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"There doesn't seem to be any action"
How in the world would you know what action has or hasn't been taken?
My kid was that kid. BEGGED AND PLEADED for him to be removed to a special school. It never happened. By all means, bug the administration, I'm sure his parents don't want him to hurt other kids either.
NP but there have been no discernible results. When your kid is violent with other kids repeatedly, throwing up your hands and getting defensive doesn’t help.
OP, I’d get a group of parents together and create a huge paper trail. Get your school board rep involved. Create a stink. Be a pain in the a**.
Fight for your kid against this violent child.
Who is throwing their hands up? No one. You have no idea how hard we all have tried to get our kids help. By all means, OP should raise hell, but don't pretend we're all just over here like "welp, nbd, just gonna rest on my butt"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. What people are failing to understand,[b] is that the child may not be special needs or may not have all of the required paper work or assessments to have a diagnosis or an IEP. It is a long process in which could incorporate MANY people (psychologist, doctors, lawyers, special education department, parents, etc). Finding the right needs of the child will not happen with a flip of a switch. There is a lot of trial and error along the way. Does it mean that other children should not be kept safe in the classroom? Absolutely not. So what can you do as a parent on the other end of the child that may be hurting others? Sit in on the classrooms to observe behaviors not just of other children but of your child. What can your child do differently in the classroom? Maybe sit somewhere else? Maybe help this student less? or more? Hold a meeting with the admin team and come up with a game plan on how the school will keep your child safe in the classroom as it currently seems unsafe.
lady all of us understand that except op
It’s been 3 years of this student and hundred of incident reports in this grade. They have a full time aide that in unable to control them. I’m asking the next steps in a situation like this. No need to be defensive because your own child is similar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"There doesn't seem to be any action"
How in the world would you know what action has or hasn't been taken?
My kid was that kid. BEGGED AND PLEADED for him to be removed to a special school. It never happened. By all means, bug the administration, I'm sure his parents don't want him to hurt other kids either.
NP but there have been no discernible results. When your kid is violent with other kids repeatedly, throwing up your hands and getting defensive doesn’t help.
OP, I’d get a group of parents together and create a huge paper trail. Get your school board rep involved. Create a stink. Be a pain in the a**.
Fight for your kid against this violent child.
Anonymous wrote:"There doesn't seem to be any action"
How in the world would you know what action has or hasn't been taken?
My kid was that kid. BEGGED AND PLEADED for him to be removed to a special school. It never happened. By all means, bug the administration, I'm sure his parents don't want him to hurt other kids either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. What people are failing to understand,[b] is that the child may not be special needs or may not have all of the required paper work or assessments to have a diagnosis or an IEP. It is a long process in which could incorporate MANY people (psychologist, doctors, lawyers, special education department, parents, etc). Finding the right needs of the child will not happen with a flip of a switch. There is a lot of trial and error along the way. Does it mean that other children should not be kept safe in the classroom? Absolutely not. So what can you do as a parent on the other end of the child that may be hurting others? Sit in on the classrooms to observe behaviors not just of other children but of your child. What can your child do differently in the classroom? Maybe sit somewhere else? Maybe help this student less? or more? Hold a meeting with the admin team and come up with a game plan on how the school will keep your child safe in the classroom as it currently seems unsafe.
lady all of us understand that except op
It’s been 3 years of this student and hundred of incident reports in this grade. They have a full time aide that in unable to control them. I’m asking the next steps in a situation like this. No need to be defensive because your own child is similar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"There doesn't seem to be any action"
How in the world would you know what action has or hasn't been taken?
My kid was that kid. BEGGED AND PLEADED for him to be removed to a special school. It never happened. By all means, bug the administration, I'm sure his parents don't want him to hurt other kids either.
what is his diagnosis?
I know there’s been no action because the student is in the classroom and my child continues to be hit.
Why would I tell you my kid's DX? You aren't a SN parent clearly.
Also - that doesn't mean there's been no action. Don't get me wrong, your kid being hit is completely unacceptable, but that doesn't mean the parents aren't doing anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. What people are failing to understand,[b] is that the child may not be special needs or may not have all of the required paper work or assessments to have a diagnosis or an IEP. It is a long process in which could incorporate MANY people (psychologist, doctors, lawyers, special education department, parents, etc). Finding the right needs of the child will not happen with a flip of a switch. There is a lot of trial and error along the way. Does it mean that other children should not be kept safe in the classroom? Absolutely not. So what can you do as a parent on the other end of the child that may be hurting others? Sit in on the classrooms to observe behaviors not just of other children but of your child. What can your child do differently in the classroom? Maybe sit somewhere else? Maybe help this student less? or more? Hold a meeting with the admin team and come up with a game plan on how the school will keep your child safe in the classroom as it currently seems unsafe.
lady all of us understand that except op
Anonymous wrote:"There doesn't seem to be any action"
How in the world would you know what action has or hasn't been taken?
My kid was that kid. BEGGED AND PLEADED for him to be removed to a special school. It never happened. By all means, bug the administration, I'm sure his parents don't want him to hurt other kids either.
Anonymous wrote:"There doesn't seem to be any action"
How in the world would you know what action has or hasn't been taken?
My kid was that kid. BEGGED AND PLEADED for him to be removed to a special school. It never happened. By all means, bug the administration, I'm sure his parents don't want him to hurt other kids either.
Anonymous wrote:Lab School meets needs of special needs students for $50K a year, and some kids still need to pay for private services on top of that. DC public spends on average $25K per student. Where’s the extra $25K+ per student supposed to come from to provide all the services needed?