Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Bullied LINDA

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

> Liz, your story is amazing and so beyond anything in my experience.

It is an amazing school district ... they also freely give special ed services

to kids who you would never even think remotely qualify for it.

> In what region is this school district?

> Is the school to which you are referring public or private?

> Is the overall area served by this district more affluent than

> surrounding communities?

We're in suburban Boston, and this is the public school district in our town.

But our town is not a " typical American town " ... we're known as the suburb

Harvard and MIT professors move to to rear their kids in the suburbs. We also

have a very high per capita rate of Nobel laureates ... and I think Spectrum

runs higher in this group than in many others. [My husband is a PhD in

Engineering, working in a MIT-associated lab -- just a typical town citizen.]

Parents are also very involved in education here, and quite willing to step in

and advocate for their kids. I've heard from teacher friends in the area (not my

town) that our district is a hard one to teach in, as teachers' actions are

seriously questioned by parents -- many of whom know more than the teachers!

We moved here on a bit of luck ... originally we were planning to live further

out in the 'burbs, but then DH commuted in to deepest Cambridge for a week --

and decided we *must* live closer in. I'd heard rumors of how good the schools

were, so we looked here first ... and bought the first house we looked at. [it

wasn't perfect, we knew we'd have to remodel it, and have done so.]

> Is " Ocelot " your daughter's real given name?

No. I belong to several public (anyone can join) e-lists for parents of gifted

kids, and got in the habit of using pseudonyms there. That's also why I don't

mention my town name on list, though I'll share with anyone privately,

especially if they have a good reason to know.

> Just trying to understand, that's all. It all sounds almost too good to

> be true. What lucky kids they are indeed.

We are incredibly lucky to live in " Spectrum City "

--Liz

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Lorelie:

If you send me your snail addy I will send you my copy tomorrow. I have a weeks break till my summer term starts on the 21st and have to run some errands tomorrow.

I love the concept and think it is more than doable. You get two kids from the alpha group to walk side by side of the victim and just talk or listen to them. That is all they have to do. Both sides win. The victim gets to talk about their special subject and the alpha group gets to see how bright they really are. The victim also gets to practice social skills an gain friends that he might of never had. It can be a positive experience for both sides.

What I hesitate about is how she recommends doing this in our climate and economy. You need a lead teacher to co-ordinate the program that takes time and I am not sure how many administrators in today's economy will relieve that teacher of all additional responsibility to oversee this one program, but you never know till you ask.

If it was me? I would recommend this to the IEP team and if I had buy it, would design it around my kid and needs and see how we could best implement it. I think it is a great idea as like you and the book state, teachers and administrator's often turn a blind eye and think it is a right of passage. <sigh>

Just me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Newland wrote:

<< I love the concept and think it is more than doable. You get two kids

from the alpha group to walk side by side of the victim and just talk or

listen to them. That is all they have to do. Both sides win. The

victim gets to talk about their special subject and the alpha group gets

to see how bright they really are. The victim also gets to practice

social skills an gain friends that he might of never had. It can be a

positive experience for both sides. >>

I agree that it's doable, . My only concern is whether the kids

from the alpha group are well chosen by the adults.

If not, I can imagine several situations where the addition of these

alpha kids could potentially make a bad situation even more traumatic

for the victim.

Bullying can be very subtle, and adults aren't always the best judges of

what kids are really up to in the hallways.

<< What I hesitate about is how she recommends doing this in our climate

and economy. You need a lead teacher to co-ordinate the program that

takes time and I am not sure how many administrators in today's economy

will relieve that teacher of all additional responsibility to oversee

this one program, but you never know till you ask. >>

That is why I was so bowled-over by the story Liz shared about her

school district. In more typical districts in this climate and economy,

exactly where will all these resources come from to implement such a

buddy system?

I vote that we all move to Liz's neighborhood and volunteer in her

district. ;)

Best,

~CJ

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

" The reason so many people misunderstand so many issues is not that

these issues are so complex, but that people do not want a factual or

analytical explanation that leaves them emotionally unsatisfied. They

want villains to hate and heroes to cheer -- and they don't want

explanations that do not give them that. " ~~ Sowell

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...