Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree there may be consequences to his band grade, which is ridiculous.
I would email and include his guidance counselor, both teachers and maybe even an administrator to lay out the situation and ask them what they think the solution is.
I HATE HATE HATE these situations where the staff of the school tells you one thing (in tough, non-negotiable terms) and they talk a big talk about how you should prioritize THEM over your other responsibilities. No empathy that the other teacher is saying the same thing.
Get it out there. Make them say it to each others' faces.
The child is a freshman. Long road ahead if this is this upsetting. Do miss the class. Do show up for band. There is a need to learn resilience and that the world will not crumble if you get one C during the term.
It's not about getting one C. It's a challenging class. It's hard to make up the work. It's stressful missing that lesson and he shouldn't have to miss it because another class will give him a bad grade if he doesn't miss it. That is absolutely asinine.
So what did the teacher say when he spoke with him to see what options are available so he doesn't fall behind? Has he even tried to solve the problem? Or is he being a wuss and not talking to the responsible adults.
Stop calling a 14 year old boy a wuss, you POS
He thinks going to the class is the right thing to do, so he's doing that. He is not weak. You may think he's misguided or whatever but there is no reason to call him a name.
He's planning to ghost his band because he's too scared to speak to a teacher. That's not okay. He needs to show more maturity.
Anonymous wrote:I have a funny feeling this kid isn’t in band. He’s actually in the orchestra. The kid is in AYPO so obviously plays orchestra. Band was a cover. I also know what school this is, as my child is in this same performance which is taking place today. It’s a mix of band, orchestra, choir and drama students. It’s a fun holiday performance. My child is older and his teachers were 100% supportive.
Anonymous wrote:his band grade will probably take a hit. that'll affect his GPA
Anonymous wrote:I have a funny feeling this kid isn’t in band. He’s actually in the orchestra. The kid is in AYPO so obviously plays orchestra. Band was a cover. I also know what school this is, as my child is in this same performance which is taking place today. It’s a mix of band, orchestra, choir and drama students. It’s a fun holiday performance. My child is older and his teachers were 100% supportive.
Anonymous wrote:God forbit this kid ever gets sick during the school year.
It sucks to have to catch up. No question. They deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At our school it’s common to miss class for various school-sponsored things, from a few hours to many days for school related trips. Teachers are expected to be accommodating. I can’t think of any occasion where a student refused to participate in the event they elected to join.
Sounds like performing arts are not for him.
He right
You are an idiot
Anonymous wrote:OP, this just plays out. With him navigating, the perhaps, rough waters. True character building. This experience -overall- not a bad thing. Either decision by the student (not the school) is defensible. He will and should defend himself if needed.
btw, my DD once walked off the field during (once again) a practice that ran way long. She had a very important test to (continue) studying for. It was a scene. The coach berated her but instead, she felt empowered. Proud of herself and knew she had the support of her teammates. Thought she made him look much worse
Anonymous wrote:For me commitment to a group is very important and it would be poor character to not show up for your band/team. Your child can prepare by having a friend take good notes, and of course should tell the teacher beforehand (at our school you need teachers to sign a permission slip even for in-school events). It's also good to show some flexibility and ability to adapt: what if he were sick? Would his grades crumble from missing one day?
Anonymous wrote:As the teacher of that hard class, your son is making a mature, responsible choice.
I had 6 kids miss my class last week for a mid day band concert. They have now been behind all week and will struggle to catch up before Friday’s test.
I don’t know why performances have to be during the school day.