Guest guest Posted May 17, 2005 Report Share Posted May 17, 2005 In a message dated 5/16/2005 7:55:37 PM Central Standard Time, jtesmer799@... writes: Good Luck with getting Sara's IEP transferred to the new school. :-) Hope it goes well. Exactly when is the big move? I'm assuming you're staying til the end of the school year with ? (btw, I think I agree with , will probably decide to join you in your new city in a year or so, hehe) Hi I will fight my hardest to keep this IEP in place its awesome!!!!!! since Im NOT moving out of state I really hope they see the team who made this IEP is the personal who should be writing for Sara. The house we were to buy fell (finally) through as of yesterday (we had hope until then) soooooooooo we are out of time and will rent for 6 months and house hunt together during the next 6 months ............ Mikes been doing it with my sister and some can imagine what he's looking for lol Our target date is the 25th but I cant imagine that ....... Mikes dads surgery has been again postponed because he now has an irregular heart beat and has to see a cardiologist today, the surgeon refused to do the surgery until he's seen by the cardio. Last I heard his surgery is tentatively set for the 25th or 26th ............. Im not leaving him or MIL so my stuff may arrive in the new house without me ............ what a mess Im in. School is finished the 26th so I'll arrive when things calm down here .......... 's trying to talk me into staying with her for the month of June .......... I love this girl Kathy mom to Sara 13 ¸...¸ ___/ /\ \___ ¸...¸ ,·´º o`·, /__/ _/\_ \__\ ,·´º o`·, ```)¨(´´´ | | | | | | | | | ```)¨(´´´ ¸,.-·²°´ ¸,.-·~·~·-.,¸ `°²·-.¸ As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord. Josh. 24:15 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2005 Report Share Posted May 17, 2005 In a message dated 5/16/2005 1:37:07 PM Eastern Daylight Time, collarbone@... writes: Are you suggesting that a teacher needs to look in my child's file and see the MR label before he/she will decide my child will not be able to keep up academically, and will need learning supports? Naw, usually they just look at our kids faces to determine that. Cheryl in VA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2005 Report Share Posted May 17, 2005 In a message dated 5/16/2005 1:37:07 PM Eastern Daylight Time, collarbone@... writes: Are you suggesting that a teacher needs to look in my child's file and see the MR label before he/she will decide my child will not be able to keep up academically, and will need learning supports? Naw, usually they just look at our kids faces to determine that. Cheryl in VA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2005 Report Share Posted May 17, 2005 In a message dated 5/16/2005 8:55:31 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, jtesmer799@... writes: Regarding 'teaching to the test " what confuses me is why kids are having such a hard time being tested on things they're supposedly supposed to have been taught each year. I spoke with a sixth grade teacher yesterday, seems the idiots making the tests up are intentionally trying to trip kids up. She said the choices for answers are so close that it is often 1 word or a double negative is used that eliminates the wrong answer from the right one! Seems to me the test makers aren't making tests to test the child's knowledge of the material but their test taking ability. Cari Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2005 Report Share Posted May 17, 2005 In a message dated 5/16/2005 8:55:31 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, jtesmer799@... writes: Regarding 'teaching to the test " what confuses me is why kids are having such a hard time being tested on things they're supposedly supposed to have been taught each year. I spoke with a sixth grade teacher yesterday, seems the idiots making the tests up are intentionally trying to trip kids up. She said the choices for answers are so close that it is often 1 word or a double negative is used that eliminates the wrong answer from the right one! Seems to me the test makers aren't making tests to test the child's knowledge of the material but their test taking ability. Cari Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2005 Report Share Posted May 17, 2005 what confuses me is why kids are having such a hard time being tested on things they're supposedly supposed to have been taught each year. Tell me about it!!! For three years all my school has been doing is " teaching " for the English language arts tests because the scores are low. They have let everything else fall by the wayside because of thesde stupid scores and our kids are getting a bum deal in their educations. It is absolutely ridiculous. Loree Re: MR Label: Can we choose any other label? HELP!! Not confused here. LOL I think I've known you for to long to not know where your'e coming from. hehe. Still have a copy of each grades curriculum requirements, huh? :-) Regarding 'teaching to the test " what confuses me is why kids are having such a hard time being tested on things they're supposedly supposed to have been taught each year. It's beginning to look like this nation needs a more comprehensive curricilum that teaches the three r's. and from my oldest's frustration with 'new' math while in elementry.. and the impression given by her teachers that THIS IS THE WAY YOU HAVE TO DO THIS!!!!!...perhaps it's time to quit playing with how things are taught from the start, to show kids struggling the 'old' way to do it, which made much more sense for her, but she 'thought' from what the authority figure said that SHE COULDN'T LISTEN TO ME CAUSE I WASN " T A TEACHER. sigh......(course that is a whole other argument, hehe) Good Luck with getting Sara's IEP transferred to the new school. :-) Hope it goes well. Exactly when is the big move? I'm assuming you're staying til the end of the school year with ? (btw, I think I agree with , will probably decide to join you in your new city in a year or so, hehe) Take care :-) Joy ....who hates those sheets with little bubbles to fill in just cause I always end up going back to find out which question I missed, sometimes it's a longgggg way back. LOL (maybe that's some of the problem, hehe) Our schools are graded in 3 areas, one being Sped. If they fail in Sped (LD/resource kids included) then the school fails. Funding for the school is a result. We have many schools inside the Memphis area which are close to being taken over by the state because they are labeled " failed schools " we are not in that district I can see why they test here but I can also see how this fails the child later (teachers only teach all year for what's on the test Not many here like the NCLB for reasons I do understand. Anyway the bottom line is I have enough safeguards in Sara's IEP to see growth, even with the Reg Ed curriculum of the year Kathy mom to Sara 13 .............. betting I confused more than cleared up lol ¸...¸ ___/ /\ \___ ¸...¸ ,·´º o`·, /__/ _/\_ \__\ ,·´º o`·, ```)¨(´´´ | | | | | | | | | ```)¨(´´´ ¸,.-·²°´ ¸,.-·~·~·-.,¸ `°²·-.¸ As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord. Josh. 24:15 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2005 Report Share Posted May 17, 2005 what confuses me is why kids are having such a hard time being tested on things they're supposedly supposed to have been taught each year. Tell me about it!!! For three years all my school has been doing is " teaching " for the English language arts tests because the scores are low. They have let everything else fall by the wayside because of thesde stupid scores and our kids are getting a bum deal in their educations. It is absolutely ridiculous. Loree Re: MR Label: Can we choose any other label? HELP!! Not confused here. LOL I think I've known you for to long to not know where your'e coming from. hehe. Still have a copy of each grades curriculum requirements, huh? :-) Regarding 'teaching to the test " what confuses me is why kids are having such a hard time being tested on things they're supposedly supposed to have been taught each year. It's beginning to look like this nation needs a more comprehensive curricilum that teaches the three r's. and from my oldest's frustration with 'new' math while in elementry.. and the impression given by her teachers that THIS IS THE WAY YOU HAVE TO DO THIS!!!!!...perhaps it's time to quit playing with how things are taught from the start, to show kids struggling the 'old' way to do it, which made much more sense for her, but she 'thought' from what the authority figure said that SHE COULDN'T LISTEN TO ME CAUSE I WASN " T A TEACHER. sigh......(course that is a whole other argument, hehe) Good Luck with getting Sara's IEP transferred to the new school. :-) Hope it goes well. Exactly when is the big move? I'm assuming you're staying til the end of the school year with ? (btw, I think I agree with , will probably decide to join you in your new city in a year or so, hehe) Take care :-) Joy ....who hates those sheets with little bubbles to fill in just cause I always end up going back to find out which question I missed, sometimes it's a longgggg way back. LOL (maybe that's some of the problem, hehe) Our schools are graded in 3 areas, one being Sped. If they fail in Sped (LD/resource kids included) then the school fails. Funding for the school is a result. We have many schools inside the Memphis area which are close to being taken over by the state because they are labeled " failed schools " we are not in that district I can see why they test here but I can also see how this fails the child later (teachers only teach all year for what's on the test Not many here like the NCLB for reasons I do understand. Anyway the bottom line is I have enough safeguards in Sara's IEP to see growth, even with the Reg Ed curriculum of the year Kathy mom to Sara 13 .............. betting I confused more than cleared up lol ¸...¸ ___/ /\ \___ ¸...¸ ,·´º o`·, /__/ _/\_ \__\ ,·´º o`·, ```)¨(´´´ | | | | | | | | | ```)¨(´´´ ¸,.-·²°´ ¸,.-·~·~·-.,¸ `°²·-.¸ As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord. Josh. 24:15 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2005 Report Share Posted May 17, 2005 I can remember when I was in 6th grade and they started teaching the " new " math. I won't tell you how old I am, suffice it tpo say it is going back a ways. Anyway I was so totally confused that my dad did what you did and set me back to basics. Well the teacher went nuts telling me that it didn't matter if I got the right answer it was all in the " problem solving " . When I told my dad he went nuts too, went to school and told the teacher what the heck was he thinking. I could problem solve all day long but if I could not get the answer this way I wasn't problem solving at all. A whole group of kids had a LOT of trouble with Math after they switched us to a new way of doing math and told us to forget everything wr learned up to that point. Where are their heads?? Loree Re: MR Label: Can we choose any other label? HELP!! Joy wrote: >Regarding 'teaching to the test " what confuses me is why kids are having such a hard time being tested on things they're supposedly supposed to have been taught each year. It's beginning to look like this nation needs a more comprehensive curricilum that teaches the three r's. and from my oldest's frustration with 'new' math while in elementry.. and the impression given by her teachers that THIS IS THE WAY YOU HAVE TO DO THIS!!!!!...perhaps it's time to quit playing with how things are taught from the start, to show kids struggling the 'old' way to do it, which made much more sense for her, but she 'thought' from what the authority figure said that SHE COULDN'T LISTEN TO ME CAUSE I WASN " T A TEACHER. sigh......(course that is a whole other argument, hehe) > I TOTALLY agree! My 4th grader (good student, gifted program) broke down the other night while doing math homework. Turns out, she couldn't multiply anymore! Asked her " What? You've been able to do multiplication since 3rd grade...... what's up? " Well, in 4th grade, with the (IMHO stinky!) " Everyday Math " you have to learn to multiply many different ways, including " partial product method " , " lattice method " , etc. That poor kid was taught so many different ways to multiply that she looked at a pretty simple problem and didn't know what to do anymore! I told her " I don't care what the directions say, multiply these problems the good old way you were first taught " . (which we then had to quickly reteach her) Of course, she cried harder, worried about what the teacher would say. Told her " don't worry about Mr. A " (LOL) Told the teacher about it the next day (he loves the math program our district uses..... pretty much his only fault!), and said that we had decided to go back to math basics, and that should not lose credit for using more " traditional " methods for multiplication. " He knows that (1) I have probably had more years of math than he has, (2) is bright, and if this is confusing her, hummm..., and (3) the kinds of issues I have deal with for , and that I am not afraid of the anyone at school or the district! So, it has never come up again, though her confidence in math was shaken quite a bit, especially when it came time to take the State tests last week! I certainly agree that teaching different methods can be useful for students who don't get the " standard " method....... obviously, uses this every day. Certainly, Touch Math has made adding and subtracting more doable for her, where the standard method she didn't get. However, I'm not sure that it would have been necessary to teach the entire class TouchMath (though there are several kids who could certainly benefit from it!), and/or several different methods of addition. Ahhhhh, I predit the pendulum will soon begin to swing the other direction......... remember " Whole Language " rather than phonics? , mom to (9), (7 DS), and (5) Click reply to all for messages to go to the list. Just hit reply for messages to go to the sender of the message. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2005 Report Share Posted May 17, 2005 I can remember when I was in 6th grade and they started teaching the " new " math. I won't tell you how old I am, suffice it tpo say it is going back a ways. Anyway I was so totally confused that my dad did what you did and set me back to basics. Well the teacher went nuts telling me that it didn't matter if I got the right answer it was all in the " problem solving " . When I told my dad he went nuts too, went to school and told the teacher what the heck was he thinking. I could problem solve all day long but if I could not get the answer this way I wasn't problem solving at all. A whole group of kids had a LOT of trouble with Math after they switched us to a new way of doing math and told us to forget everything wr learned up to that point. Where are their heads?? Loree Re: MR Label: Can we choose any other label? HELP!! Joy wrote: >Regarding 'teaching to the test " what confuses me is why kids are having such a hard time being tested on things they're supposedly supposed to have been taught each year. It's beginning to look like this nation needs a more comprehensive curricilum that teaches the three r's. and from my oldest's frustration with 'new' math while in elementry.. and the impression given by her teachers that THIS IS THE WAY YOU HAVE TO DO THIS!!!!!...perhaps it's time to quit playing with how things are taught from the start, to show kids struggling the 'old' way to do it, which made much more sense for her, but she 'thought' from what the authority figure said that SHE COULDN'T LISTEN TO ME CAUSE I WASN " T A TEACHER. sigh......(course that is a whole other argument, hehe) > I TOTALLY agree! My 4th grader (good student, gifted program) broke down the other night while doing math homework. Turns out, she couldn't multiply anymore! Asked her " What? You've been able to do multiplication since 3rd grade...... what's up? " Well, in 4th grade, with the (IMHO stinky!) " Everyday Math " you have to learn to multiply many different ways, including " partial product method " , " lattice method " , etc. That poor kid was taught so many different ways to multiply that she looked at a pretty simple problem and didn't know what to do anymore! I told her " I don't care what the directions say, multiply these problems the good old way you were first taught " . (which we then had to quickly reteach her) Of course, she cried harder, worried about what the teacher would say. Told her " don't worry about Mr. A " (LOL) Told the teacher about it the next day (he loves the math program our district uses..... pretty much his only fault!), and said that we had decided to go back to math basics, and that should not lose credit for using more " traditional " methods for multiplication. " He knows that (1) I have probably had more years of math than he has, (2) is bright, and if this is confusing her, hummm..., and (3) the kinds of issues I have deal with for , and that I am not afraid of the anyone at school or the district! So, it has never come up again, though her confidence in math was shaken quite a bit, especially when it came time to take the State tests last week! I certainly agree that teaching different methods can be useful for students who don't get the " standard " method....... obviously, uses this every day. Certainly, Touch Math has made adding and subtracting more doable for her, where the standard method she didn't get. However, I'm not sure that it would have been necessary to teach the entire class TouchMath (though there are several kids who could certainly benefit from it!), and/or several different methods of addition. Ahhhhh, I predit the pendulum will soon begin to swing the other direction......... remember " Whole Language " rather than phonics? , mom to (9), (7 DS), and (5) Click reply to all for messages to go to the list. Just hit reply for messages to go to the sender of the message. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2005 Report Share Posted May 17, 2005 There are multiple levels to this. One is whether our kids will be seriously stigmitized by a classification of MR. That itself has different levels in the reaction of teachers .. and the reaction of peers. In both cases, there will be both acceptance and rejection. Used wrongly, the classification hurts, but used correctly it is access to programs now and for the future. Another level is whether our kids are counted in the " no child left behind " testing. That has issues of whether they are just part of a normal classroom or whether they get some special consideration. We work hard to make our kids as competent as possible, but that may well work against them as they grow to adults. If they are never declared MR (or some equivalent classification), they may never get the adult services that they might need. There is a sharp cut-off in at least some states. In CA, down syndrome doesn't immediately imply MR. After all we've been telling everyone that for at least a decade. So, those children/adults, who were not determined to be MR before age 18 may be ineligible for the services they need to allow them to live outside of the home with their parents. I prepared Jan's documentation today to help get her services. She never tested outside of the MR range, although she came close. If she had, it would be a whole lot more difficult to get services. Having an IEP is simply not enough, at least as I read the rules. Having DS is not enough, and we've told them that repeatedly as parents. Somehow, we need to avoid things that will later deny services to our kids as adults, even though we raise them hoping that those services may never be needed. MR is a label and you may not like it. We accepted it. It is something that Jan has been aware of for a long time. It isn't something that she has blame for, it is just a characteristic like color of hair or skin or whether you are skinny or fat. Few of us like the way we are, but we learn to accept it and Jan has done that. It's OK to be MR, but not OK to call someone RETARD under any circumstances. Rick .. Dad to Jan .. moving to CA this summer, at least that is the plan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2005 Report Share Posted May 17, 2005 There are multiple levels to this. One is whether our kids will be seriously stigmitized by a classification of MR. That itself has different levels in the reaction of teachers .. and the reaction of peers. In both cases, there will be both acceptance and rejection. Used wrongly, the classification hurts, but used correctly it is access to programs now and for the future. Another level is whether our kids are counted in the " no child left behind " testing. That has issues of whether they are just part of a normal classroom or whether they get some special consideration. We work hard to make our kids as competent as possible, but that may well work against them as they grow to adults. If they are never declared MR (or some equivalent classification), they may never get the adult services that they might need. There is a sharp cut-off in at least some states. In CA, down syndrome doesn't immediately imply MR. After all we've been telling everyone that for at least a decade. So, those children/adults, who were not determined to be MR before age 18 may be ineligible for the services they need to allow them to live outside of the home with their parents. I prepared Jan's documentation today to help get her services. She never tested outside of the MR range, although she came close. If she had, it would be a whole lot more difficult to get services. Having an IEP is simply not enough, at least as I read the rules. Having DS is not enough, and we've told them that repeatedly as parents. Somehow, we need to avoid things that will later deny services to our kids as adults, even though we raise them hoping that those services may never be needed. MR is a label and you may not like it. We accepted it. It is something that Jan has been aware of for a long time. It isn't something that she has blame for, it is just a characteristic like color of hair or skin or whether you are skinny or fat. Few of us like the way we are, but we learn to accept it and Jan has done that. It's OK to be MR, but not OK to call someone RETARD under any circumstances. Rick .. Dad to Jan .. moving to CA this summer, at least that is the plan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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