Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 Is handing in his homework a public thing? How do his classmates know? Perhaps the teacher needs to have an " in " box and have the kids put their homework in it as they come in to the room in the morning. I can't see why any child should have to be humiliated about their homework. I really hate the amount of public shaming that goes on in most schools (putting kids' scores up on the board, charts showing who has passed what math test, etc.). I can't see how any of that helps anyone. I wouldn't want to get confrontational about it, but in all honesty, I'd say that your son's accomodations should be arranged to be completely confidential, and having the rest of the class notice violates his rights. His teacher certainly should know that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 Bill, I'm so sorry your son is having such a tough year. We had one like that last year. This year, with a different teacher, our daughter is having few problems. I hope you will have better luck next year! BUT, in the meantime, you have to deal with this teacher. I was considering whether your son could pass something in that looks similar... but kids are too smart for that. I think you should just have the principal ask the teacher to stop having kids pass their papers in. I've forgotten what grade your son is in, but there has to be a better way. Do you have a school psychologist? (I'm sorry to have forgotten details - I know you've explained this before) We have found that having our school psychologist step in can be helpful. We are lucky to have a decent school psych., which is unusual. Having our doctor(s) call or write to the teacher was also very powerful. They tend to bow before authority. I called a meeting last year with the principal, school psychologist and the teacher and reviewed the problems with them. I started by writing an angry e-mail to our school psychologist explaining that the teacher was penalizing my daughter for her problems and asked HER to contact the principal and teacher. It worked. I know you've been through this before, but you may have to explain loudly and clearly again that your son has an ANXIETY DISORDER and publicly embarassing him is NOT HELPFUL. Would that help at all?? I don't think I'd bother talking to the teacher anymore. She isn't going to get it. Hang in there. It will get better. My daughter had daily panic attacks last year, complete with hours of vomiting, because of the school stress. This year she hates weekends because school is so much more fun. She isn't doing that well academically, but at least she is happy! Best wishes, in NV Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 His teacher > certainly should know that. > , Thanks for the input. Not te be trite, but there are quite a number of issues we feel his teacher certainly should know. Its quite a long and sordid story thus far dealing with the teacher. I'll not go into it here. Suffice to say, she seems quite incapable of thinking " outside the box " when it comes to our son's issues. Desks are grouped in small clusters...at the very least, I believe they're asked to " pass their homework forward " or something like that and the classmates in his immediate group at a minimum would notice his lack of turning anything in. This is further complicated by the fact of having the same teacher for every subject. It won't be until next school year (assuming he survives THIS one), he'll have a different teacher/different classmates for each subject. That's what I think I know, anyway. Bill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 In most of my kids' classes, homework is exchanged and graded/marked by classmates as they go over it. So that would be obvious if someone wasn't doing their's. At least in middle school and now high school, it's exchanged. I once asked the math teacher about checking his own math homework since he was about the only one who could read his writing. I'd asked him how classmates read it and he said they ask him what he wrote. I told the teacher that he's honest, and he really is. Anyway, it was a " no go. " Some years ago a parent took it to a higher court about grades being so " public. " And I was really hoping the court would agree. It's gotta affect self-esteem for sensitive kids; and/or affect what others might think about them, etc. Anyway, court ruled for the schools that nothing was wrong with it. has said that when the papers are graded in some classes, they're allowed to walk up and tell the teacher what the grade is if they don't want to call it out. > Is handing in his homework a public thing? How do his classmates know? > Perhaps the teacher needs to have an " in " box and have the kids put their > homework in it as they come in to the room in the morning. I can't see why any child > should have to be humiliated about their homework. I really hate the amount Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 Hi, I think had a good idea about having a box for kids to put homework in. It wouldn't be a big deal for the teacher to change the arrangement for all the kids. (Unless, as I said in previous post, kids are exchanging and checking papers in class, then the classmates would still know) Also I would strongly emphasize that the current arrangement is causing problems and making him " stand out " from the rest of the class. Others here might recall I had something similar happen with my son last year in 8th grade. is allowed all the time he needs to finish tests. Well, his twin, , was in his classes. had told me that a couple of the teachers would hold up class waiting for to finish his tests. After hearing this more than once from , and saying how you could tell one teacher seemed a little disgruntled by it from her expressions while waiting on ; AND how classmates were commenting to each other or just aloud or just looking towards with their own expressions/rolling eyes ( & at least once a comment wondering why he was in their class) - I got fed up and called the Office of Civil Rights. I felt that the arrangement set up for being harassed. And that he couldn't do his best job at testing knowing the class was waiting on him; you'd think that would add a little stress/anxiety, which is bad for OCD! And in a roundabout way, his grades could be affected. But my main point was the setup for harassment. A miracle that the guy that answered at OCR had OCD himself (a checker); and I told him the situation and also said that I couldn't say that was aware of how the classmates felt or what they said; he said that didn't matter. And seemed to feel as I did that it was " setting him up " in a bad way and that I had a valid complaint. And that I could go ahead and fill out an online form and they would get on it soon as they weren't that busy! I held off and told him I wanted to see if the school would cooperate first. Well, I didn't mention my OCR call to the school but set up a meeting and told them the arrangement for his extended testing time needed changed and class should not be held up; so other options were decided upon on how to handle it. Anyway, I feel that your situation is similar to mine in that it's setting up your son as " different " and pointing him out in a way that is making classmates " question " why he is different, etc. Now if in this situation no one was questioning it or bothering your son about it, I'd say there was no problem. But since classmates are commenting, I think the school needs to change the arrangement and follow through in a way for ALL kids with similar accommodations in the school. OK - that's just my long 2-cents! > So here we have what seems like a no-win situation. > > To relieve stress and meltdowns at home, we made temporary > accommodations with the school that DS would not have any homework > until the next grading period, and incremental re-introduction from > there. It seemed like a workable plan and actually helped, at > first. Now, DS's anxiety and stress each evening are growing in > anticipation of going to school because his classmates are Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2003 Report Share Posted December 17, 2003 As of this morning's visit with the therapist, it seems our best option is for home-bound, school district administered education. The homework hand-in process constitutes passing papers forward from back to front, DS is mid-row. He claims a few people have asked him about why he never has homework to turn in. We discussed having him put his name on homework papers even if we didn't complete them, just so he'd have something to turn in. Still a possiblity. Therapist wrote an " Rx " for him to be out of school until after the new year, just to try and get us through the holidays as stress-free as possible. We stopped the Anafranil as it seemed to make him morose/depressed/despondent. We think we can avoid big blow-ups and we still have the Xanax we're using. Others have posted here already about the success they've witnessed with their child and home-bound education. I think DS has a clearer picture of what would be involved now and may be more accepting of it. Hopefully, this buys us enough time to get meds and therapy working in his favor. The therapist can't even start any sort of therapy yet because his baseline anxiety is so incredibly high. So we sit and wait for the meds to work and try to keep everything as low-stress as practical without being completely subservient to an 11 y.o. Bill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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