Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lets not forget that OP mentioned that baseball isn't her son's only sport. She said he plays multiple sports.
How can he be equal to these elite gymnasts if he plays a bunch of sports?
You realize as kids, multiple players who are currently professional in sports played multiple sports? In fact multiple sports increases your athleticism and doesn't overwork certain muscles.
Anonymous wrote: Your little snowflake is not special. Why don't you home school if you want special treatment?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, do you realize that PE is more than just playing sports?
In middle school and high school, PE also involves health -- including mental wellness, drug/alcohol use, sexual education, and in HS, it includes part of the drivers ed curriculum.
Does your child get all of that too?
I realize that. Maybe he could participate for only that portion of the P.E. class?
He sounds very, very special, OP. I hope the school recognizes this and gives him his due. He deserves to be treated completely differently from every other student in his school. Hopefully, they can create some new rules and a new schedule just for him.
+1. I actually feel really bad for the kid. Can you imagine growing up with this kind of mother?
Anonymous wrote:What would kids do instead, during gym time?
Anonymous wrote:
Also it seems like girls in gymnastics or dance can only do this.
Anonymous wrote:Lets not forget that OP mentioned that baseball isn't her son's only sport. She said he plays multiple sports.
How can he be equal to these elite gymnasts if he plays a bunch of sports?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, do you realize that PE is more than just playing sports?
In middle school and high school, PE also involves health -- including mental wellness, drug/alcohol use, sexual education, and in HS, it includes part of the drivers ed curriculum.
Does your child get all of that too?
I realize that. Maybe he could participate for only that portion of the P.E. class?
He sounds very, very special, OP. I hope the school recognizes this and gives him his due. He deserves to be treated completely differently from every other student in his school. Hopefully, they can create some new rules and a new schedule just for him.
I'm not saying other students don't deserve rights he would like to have. They can if they want to or think they deserve them. I'm just saying he would get more out of being healthy and fit by sticking to his sport he wants to excel in although he plays multiple sports.
+1000. This is what the every kid-needs-an-IEP-because-they-are-speccialll group sounds like. Except OP is completely off the rails.
You are exactly right. The school should have special rules for each child. I don't know why they can't do this. Good for you for fighting for this! I really hope the school can rewrite the PE policy so that every child's case is evaluated separately and special plans can be drawn up for each child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why the OP is being hated so much. She is just asking a questions that she can not find the answer to.
The question is innocent enough, but the way she insists for her child to be accommodated like an elite gymnast, when she has not given details of her child's baseball requirements and number of practice hours, or any proof that he is indeed at an elite level, is disingenuous.
+1 The point is that there are established, specialized, programs for elite athletes that preclude a full day's attendance at school. So, one of the classes that gets "cut" is PE. OP has given no indication that her son is in such a program nor, frankly, that such a program even exists for baseball.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why the OP is being hated so much. She is just asking a questions that she can not find the answer to.
The question is innocent enough, but the way she insists for her child to be accommodated like an elite gymnast, when she has not given details of her child's baseball requirements and number of practice hours, or any proof that he is indeed at an elite level, is disingenuous.