Anonymous wrote:I would expect 12 year old boarding school kids to be brats who the parents couldn’t tolerate keeping at home. Why are you putting a nice kid there?
Anonymous wrote:As you have probably gleaned, boarding school in the US for any child under 9th grade is very unusual and not looked on favorably by most people. The assumption will either be that the child has some kind of unmanageable problem requiring a therapeutic school, or that the parents are uninterested in their child and want to dump them on someone else. So the social and cultural mix at a boarding school for 12-year-olds is not going to be typically American in any way. It's falling out of favor elsewhere, too; note that Prince George is 12 and still lives at home and goes to day school, very much NOT in his family's tradition.
Also, I get there's a culture gap here, but putting a child in boarding school when they can barely speak the language sounds absolutely bonkers to me. Even the remaining posh British boarding prep schools that take a lot of rich international students, like Summer Fields or Ludgrove, require a decent level of English at admission. If you're a child in an environment where you have to advocate for yourself, how can you possibly cope if you can't speak the language??
The solution here is to just remove your son from the school. Employ an educational consultant to help you finesse the situation, if you're feeling really shaky. If you are leaving quietly, I don't think the school really has any vested interest in trashing your son's recommendation or making it hard for him to get into another school. If they are as irritated as they sound, they will probably be more than happy to smooth the way out.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm so sorry for this horrible experience for your son - and you. I have a nephew (also Asian) whose parents sent him to boarding school at age 12 because they lived in a very small/remote town where they owned a business. He had such a horrible experience there (bullying, etc) and became schizophrenic later. Please get your son immediately and give him security and love and compassion. His mental and physical health are way more important than any academic opportunity. He can get decent school experience at a day school where you live and language immersion with you (your English is perfect!) or by doing after school activities. You could get a lawyer involved if they will not listen to you to at least give a neutral recommendation letter.
Anonymous wrote:Op, would suggest that you instead enroll your child in an international school or another local school and supplement with English-language tutoring. I imagine it would be pretty daunting to be at a boarding school away from a support system and not know a language well.
Lina2025 wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the hell is a 12 year old in boarding school? 14 is bad enough. This is insane.
He’s in a boarding school only five days a week — we pick him up every weekend. We made this decision as a family because his English was very weak, and we believed full immersion Monday–Friday would help him adapt much faster. He actually wanted to try this experience himself, and we thought it would support his language progress.
Anonymous wrote:OP is clearly the problem here and they seem oblivious to it. Poor kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lina2025 wrote:Anonymous wrote:They took your son to a podiatrist - I bet your son wasn't doing whatever he was supposed to on a regular basis and that's why his problems kept coming back during the week. Did your son understand the language he was being given?
No, that’s not the case. This is a boarding school — there is a full-time nurse whose job is to take care of students’ health needs on a daily basis.
After reviewing the Zoom recording between the nurse and the school administration (which they didn’t expect me to receive), it became clear that they were overwhelmed with seasonal illnesses and simply didn’t want to deal with my son’s toe properly. That’s why they repeatedly suggested that I “take him home for treatment.”
When I asked for basic weekday support — either daily care or at least letting him use the prescribed ointment — the nurse told me to remove him from school instead. For a child who barely speaks English, leaving school for an undefined period would mean falling behind academically and socially, which is not a reasonable solution.
So no, this is not about my son failing to follow instructions — it’s about the school refusing to provide appropriate care during the week.
He's 12. He should be capable of putting ointment on his toe once or twice a day and wrapping it. Do you think 12 yr old ballet dancers have their mommies caring for their feet? No, they handle it themselves.
NP- in many schools 12 year olds are not allowed to handle prescription medication. It’s locked up in the nurse’s office, regardless of what it is.
Sounds like your toe shoes pinched your brain.