Anonymous wrote:Wait! Can you get at IEP b/c your kid doesn't pay attention and distracts others? As a parent of one goody two shoes (who get seated next to the trouble makers) and one kid who needs constant reinforcement, I'm uber-suprised you can get accommodations b/c your kids won't behave in class. My youngest needs constant reinforcement, but I won't accept that him being a jerk is OK b/c he has "needs". That actually pisses me off. Teach manners!
Anonymous wrote:Wait! Can you get at IEP b/c your kid doesn't pay attention and distracts others? As a parent of one goody two shoes (who get seated next to the trouble makers) and one kid who needs constant reinforcement, I'm uber-suprised you can get accommodations b/c your kids won't behave in class. My youngest needs constant reinforcement, but I won't accept that him being a jerk is OK b/c he has "needs". That actually pisses me off. Teach manners!
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I know several posters think my kid must be far worse than described. He's actually pretty good at reflecting on his own behavior (after the fact, not necessarily in the moment), so when he tells me he did the work and wasn't out of control I believe that his reporting is not TOO far from accurate. We've had years of experience getting to the real story and now he's pretty efficient at cutting to the chase and being honest about what didn't go well. Also, in my original post I wanted to make clear that he wasn't perfect and listed everything I could think of (no hiding the ball).
I am inclined to ask the teacher to help me understand the grading rubric for the lab and how she arrived at the grade. It was a 25 point lab. She gave him 7 points. So somewhere along the line 18 points were not earned (or were docked, however she thinks of it), and I will request she detail the behavior. Once I receive her response I will go over it with my son and see what makes sense for next steps.
My goal is to help HIM learn when to speak up and ask when something doesn't make sense. But he's not willing (today, anyway) to go back and talk to her because he feels like she hates him and he thinks anything he says will backfire and get him in more trouble.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers don’t GIVE grades. Students EARN the grade they get
Ha! Not this student, or this situation ... but teachers fit the class into a grade distribution bell curve, one that was been enforced by the school and school system. It's not about what they earn, only in relation to their peers and what grade the school allows them to earn (except for the very outliners)
No, you're misunderstanding. My point is that OP is not making sense.
Grades are scrutinized too carefully and OP's story doesn't add up. If her son was really passing, meaning that he had a score of 70% or above, there is no way that a one-day lab would have enough points or enough weight to drop the entire quarter's grade down to 59.9% or below. Especially since a lab would be in a different weight category than the tests and quizzes. Even if his overall score had been a 61%, it would be difficult to envision a lab given enough points and value to cause the child's grade to drop to a 59.9% or below.
In other words, OP is lying about the entire scenario.
One further indicator is that IF she HAD been telling the truth she would have been falling all over herself to tell us this child's grade before the lab.
Anyway, OP is getting her wish, which is lots and lots of attention. I just wish that some of it were therapeutic by a licensed practitioner and not enabling by a bunch of us responding on an anonymous forum.
Anonymous wrote:I think that was OP's point, that the grade makes no sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher, I am having trouble with the idea that he was doing exactly what he was supposed to be doing, and somehow also telling funny stories. Which was it?
I also have trouble with the idea that a middle schooler on the last day of school needs a reminder about behavior expectations before a consequence.
It seems to me that most home ec classes would have periods where talking and conversation would be acceptable. It wasnt exactly Russian Literature
Conversation and telling funny stories to get a reaction from peers are two totally different things.
-- teacher again.
Anonymous wrote:I think that was OP's point, that the grade makes no sense.