Guest guest Posted April 20, 2007 Report Share Posted April 20, 2007 Hi, just quick thoughts (I'm on break at work!). I agree if the French Immersion is stressful and she's willing, go back to the English. (I thought Immersion was required?) Reduce the stress from that. As to schoolwork and homework - and this idea is coming from what my son and I had to do back in middle school - would it actually be easier on her if she brought home the schoolwork and/or homework and did it with mom/dad? That is, mom/dad would do all the writing, she would just have to dictate. This also give you a way to prompt her for answers, get her started by asking a question.... This also worked with math (I'd write the problem down, he'd tell me the steps; although my son would do math in his head sometimes and all I'd have to write down were the answers! he couldn't say the steps). I even read aloud his chapters/stories to him. What we eventually did was have him do short assignments/answers like fill-in-the-blank or some short sentence answers and work toward his taking the longer writing ones back. But at first I filled in all, even writing down and looking up vocabulary word definitions (to which I made him listen and repeat back). As I said, just quick thoughts. He'd have got nothing done without my help and it was rough on me each night too, taking up my time, etc. I'm very glad to hear the school is being so accommodating though, I know our's wouldn't have allowed that. (North Carolina) > > Dd12 has been having more and more difficulty at school. At first we accommodated her > anxiety by saying she didn't have to do her homework (teacher agreed). Then she was > falling behind and started " feeling stupid " . So we had an IEP (which we're still finalizing, > hence this question) and as of Tuesday (she missed Monday, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2007 Report Share Posted April 20, 2007 Thanks Chris. This actually all started when she became unable to do work at home. She doesn't respond well to having to do homework. She actually LOVES writing, and when she is well, or better, that is mostly what she does, write stories. She won a scholarship amongst all the participants at a writing camp last summer to attend again this year for free because they singled her out as so talented (didn't make her feel good about herself though). She doesn't have trouble with the writing. I don't really know what the problem is, and maybe that's why I'm having such a hard time coming up with a solution. She doesn't take direction well from Me or dh, and at school, it's too overwhelming in the classroom. She'd probably do well one-on-one with a tutor or helper, but doesn't do well completely self-directed either. She told dh this morning (after I left) that she wants to continue working in the library and isn't ready to go back to class yet, though she did have a meltdown last night because she feels she isn't learning anything and she's stupid and doesn't get it the way other kids do. Theresa (in Vancouver, Canada) > > > > Dd12 has been having more and more difficulty at school. At first > we accommodated her > > anxiety by saying she didn't have to do her homework (teacher > agreed). Then she was > > falling behind and started " feeling stupid " . So we had an IEP > (which we're still finalizing, > > hence this question) and as of Tuesday (she missed Monday, > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 25, 2007 Report Share Posted April 25, 2007 Thanks Sinead. I think it's the difficulty with school itself for her that's causing the anxiety. I met yesterday with her psychiatrist and psychologist (I'm psyched out LOL), and the psychologist is going to look into getting a psychoeducational assessment for dd. I figure that, because dd has such high verbal skills, she has done well in school because she writes so well (she is gifed in that area). But this year, being French Immersion, she can't rely on her strong English skills, so her real abilities come through, and they're not as strong as was thought, especially in math. So instead of being at the head of the class, she was just average, which was too stressful for her, then she started falling behind, homework became a battleground, OCD became unmanageable, we let homework go (with teacher's approval), she fell further and further behind, felt stupid... The compromise we've reached is that she spends most of her time in the library, writing and reading. She does the fun things with her class and chooses whether or not to do them. She does lament that she isn't learning anything, but we'll take it one step at a time. She does go to class where the teacher is doing a unit on worrying (for the whole class) and she's enjoying that. Did I mention that the school was very supportive :-). I'm hoping the school will find an aide for her, but since it's mid-year, they may not have the funding for it, but there will definitely be funding for next year (grade 7), and the pieces will be in place for her to get help in high school. I may look at hiring a private tutor or getting a high school student to work with her at school. Oh, and the way she handles it socially now is to say that she's doing a special writing program and that's why she's working in the library. We will have to deal next with the question of how much to share with her peers, as she's a very social kid and has (had?) a lot of friends, and people who like her as she has a quirky sense of humour and likes to make people laugh, but she's lost friends lately because of her excessive reassurance-seeking. The melatonin is helping with sleep onset, so that's good, considering she had originally had a bad reaction to it. So, things have settled down a bit. I've stepped up the firmness about bedtime (with big- time resistance from both dd and dh), and this morning, she actually came upstairs after I woke her up without needing more than one reminder and wasn't groggy. Baby steps. One day at a time. And my constant mantra is " take care of yourself and you'll have the energy to take care of your kids. " I spoke with my boss yesterday, just to make her aware of the struggles I'm facing at home, so she knows if things are slipping, there's a reason, and she was VERY supportive. Deep breath in...slow breath out. I've started yoga too. Theresa (in Vancouver, Canada) dd12 OCD 12.5mg Prozac, 6.25 mg Seroquil, 3mg Melatonin; ds9; dd5 > > > > > > Dd12 has been having more and more difficulty at school. At > first > > we accommodated her > > > anxiety by saying she didn't have to do her homework (teacher > > agreed). Then she was > > > falling behind and started " feeling stupid " . So we had an IEP > > (which we're still finalizing, > > > hence this question) and as of Tuesday (she missed Monday, > > > > > > > __________________________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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