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Need advice, repost from ADHD BB

Submitted by an LD OnLine user on

Hi Socks and all, I’m sure you’ll remember me. First off, let me say that up until this past week, this had been the best school
year yet. My son has been taking Concerta since the first of the school year. Grades have improved like you wouldn’t
believe, so has his attitude. Last year, we were both struggling to keep him above passing, This year his current GPA is 2.85
and I”ve only had to help with homework maybe 3 times. Amazing!
But Friday, he called me as soon as he got home, the bomb dropped. Each student starts out the 9 weeks with 30 good
behavior points, which they lose for bad behavior. He told me before Christmas break that the teacher told him he only 5 left.
He was suprised, they don’t tell you when you lose them, they just take them away. He didn’t know where they had all gone.
He did admit to getting caught chewing gum a few times. He said she showed him some of the slips and they didn’t even have
dates on them, he questioned her about them and she said, well you did it, I’ll just have to find a date. WEll, anyway, if you
get to 5 points, they send you to the alternative school for 3 days, which is like a military school, which is where they send
kids who get caught smoking, fighting, skipping school,etc. Well, he’s going Monday, because on Friday he didn’t dress for
gym, - 3 points,which made him below the 5 point mark. He said the principal called him to the office and told him he had to
go and then when he looked over his offenses, he said this is silly, you don’t have to go. I guess he called him back before the
end of the day, and said well you do have to go. The teachers had a fit and said a rule is a rule and it wasn’t fair to make an
exception. I called and talked to the principal, he told me the same thing. Monday morning I will be going to the teacher, to
see exactly what “criminal things” he has done. I”ve told my son the punishment doesn’t fit the crime, but you did break the
rules, so there is nothing I can do, but I am livid. This kid has done a complete turn around and all they can do is keep on
finding things to punish him for. I really think, part of the problem is me. He has one teacher ( the same one he has last year)
who hates me, because I complained about her not following the IEP. I think this is her way of getting even. They aren’t
following the IEP this year either, but I have let it go, because he was doing so well and he said Mom, please just drop it, it
just makes them pick on me. Now, I feel horrible and I’m ready to
“get even”.
I’m ready to ask for a behavior modification plan if it will keep this from happening again, but I don’t know how to start, what
to ask for, and how to accomplish it. What I’m really ready to do is go beat the crap out of the teacher, but I know that isn’t
an option. I do feel like they are picking on him, because of me.
So what’s everyones advice, go complain, again, or leave it be. I really hate the thought of sitting back and doing nothing. But
it seems by doing something,I’ve caused this. Plus, all this complaing has really gotten us no where, they still don’t follow the
IEP. At the last meeting, one of the teachers, said, it’s not fair to the other children when I ask for accomodations for my son.
I know I’ve gone on and on and it might not even make since, but I know this is where I can always find help.
Thanks for any advice

Another thing

.Just to give you an idea of what kind of school system I’m dealing with. The system has a policy that if you miss more than 4
days of school in a nine week grading period, you have to make that time up, by staying after school for 4 hours each night.
When I read this policy I thought it meant if you were absent and it was unexcused. Nope! not so , My daughter(non LD) had mono
and the doctor wanted her home for 2 weeks. She completed all her work at home and still made the honor roll. Even with a
doctors excuse she still has to make up that time. I called and talked to her prinicpal(different prinicpal, different school, same school system), he said that doesn’t matter, a rule is a
rule. I ask what she would be doing in these four hours and he said making up her work. I explained her work was all made
up, and he said well then she can clean the school, or I’ll give her F’s for this nine week. This in an honor student, a senior,
whe missed more school this year than she has missed her whole school career. Are all school systems this way, or are we
just “lucky”?
Thanks for listening to me vent,and I’d appreciate any help.

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 01/15/2003 - 2:01 AM

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I would go to the school on the next day and sit with my child in the principal’s office and say that I want an emergency iep meeting and a functional behavioral analysis and an interim behavior plan in the mean time (put these requests in writing) and you will not let your child be removed from his usual setting without an iep meeting. If this point system is not in his iep currently, I would think you would have some ammunition—but I am just a parent speaking. I would not let my child be punished for something he did not understand—or they are discrimination against him on the basis of his disability—by definition, he has impluse control issues (and what ever else you can think of). I would make a stink with the school board and the superintendent.
These rules are absolutely ridiculious and remind me of some of the stupid things my district has done.
I also would arrive with a compliance complaint filled out in your hand and ready to mail as a threat.—but then do it anyway.
just my two cents—are they giving him an education on Kafka? tell your son about that and about the book “Darkness at Noon” —about a man who never knew what he was accused of and was sent to prison in the Soviet Gulag.
tell your son that maybe the new school motto is “Abandon Hope, all ye who enter here’ ” and they forgot to tell the parents and kids. (adding some humor to an awful situation.)

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 01/15/2003 - 2:14 AM

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I went to the school on Monday morning to get a copy of the “criminal charges” against my son. I’m sure now that the school system will be suggesting I take parenting classes, because obviously I’m raising a future murderer or such. He had been caught with gum 6 times (which is against the rules, and I admit he deserved to have punishment, he broke the rules, but what happened to the ole days, when if you got caught with gum, they told you to spit it out, if you got caught again, you had to scrape all gum off the bottom of the chairs or something) he also lost points when a sub asked him to read aloud in class, he refused (his IEP states, no reading aloud in class) he didn’t sit in his assigned seat ( he gets to school 20 minutes before school starts, this was the time when he wasn’t in his assigned seat) The teacher even told me that after that one time he has always been in his seat. He hit a boy with his book bag (although, he doesn’t even carry a book bag, and he doesn’t remember anything about this incident) And, he didn’t dress for gym (he’s 14, with a changing body)
Now, before anyone starts thinking, I’m the type of parent who never thinks my kid does anything wrong, that’s not me. I admit, all these things were breaking the rules (well, except the not reading aloud thing) and he deserves punishment, but the punishment should fit the crime. Plus, when these “criminal acts” are committed, he isn’t even told,he’s losing points, they just take them away. I brought this up the teacher,and she said we shouldn’t have to tell him, he knows the rules. I pointed out that that is true, but if you are driving down the road above the speed limit, and you pass a highway patrolman, they stop and tell you you were speeding, they just don’t take points off your license and then one day you lose them. She just shook her head.
And, the real topper, when I walked in the office, to ask for the teacher, I was met at the door, by the prinicpal, CHEWING GUM. When the teacher started telling me about him chewing gum, I said oh, you’re not allowed to have gum, she said NO!!! I said, well that’s funny the prinicpal just met me at the door chewing gum, she said that’s a different story. Yeah, is sure is.
But anyway, he’s now been to 2 days of the alternative school, he likes it, he said those teachers treat you better than his home school. He doesn’t like the bus ride, which is about an hour and a half, and he misses his friends, but he said as far as school goes, it’s better. Now isn’t that scary.

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 01/15/2003 - 3:15 AM

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Kathy,

I have little tolerance for stupidity, and I’d have to get my kids out of something that stupid, really.

The extra hours for your daughter is absurd and I’d pull her out before I’d make her stay after school when she has already made up the work.

I’d have made an issue over the “read-aloud in class” loss of points if those reinstated would have kept him from the alternative school.

I’d get an advocate and get that IEP straightened out, too. This child needs to be told when he has points taken away and I’d have that in the IEP immediately!

Janis

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 01/15/2003 - 3:42 AM

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Hey there,

Well am joining the parents group of being considered “challenging” to say the least when it comes to the school system.

My daughter had her IEP meeting where they redid her IEP in September. One meeting and it was set. AT that time they were considering discontinuation of behavioral services (they considered her to being much improved from the previous year) much to my dismay and concern. Yes, I always hope that this year will be the best year ever but I have concern about “jumping the gun” well in December we had the “meltdown”. ( i wrote about this in an early post). The worst part of it all was the lack of communication between adults and the fact that I found my daughter underneath a table crying. This situation she was involved in lasted 2 1/2 hours with her being suspended from school. I called for an emergency IEP meeting. They wrote up a benign behavioral plan, that I just recently found out they were not utilizing. My suggestions at that time are only being utilized in a half hearted attempt on their part, with even two of her teachers refusing to participate. Of course, much to my surprise, wrong, I am not surprised.
Again, last week we had an incident (Thursday) in which she was caught “throwing a snowball outside at another student” (not allowed, okay I understand that part). The note sent home said she would be held in from recess for “not completing an assignment and for the snowball”. Well her IEP addresses assignments and the process for completion. It also addresses the fact that lunch recess the only time of day for any “fresh air activity” is not to be utilized for punnishment. Wrong. The next day she wore a shirt to school that was considered inappropriate for what it said on it. (t-shirt a xmas gift from her father in Michigan from Abercrombie) resulted in another 2 1/2 hour incident of her refusing to remove the shirt and also refusing to do so in front of teachers and the principal. By the way, I was out of town 100 miles away that week for work, leaving each day before school, sending my two children to two different schools in a cab, I also sent in a note explaining the situation in detail, leaving two different phone numbers of people that I considered capable of dealing with my daughter for any given situation. Two and one half hours later after this incident started they called me. My solution to the situation was for her to draw a picture put her Dad’s name on the picture and tape it to the back of the shirt. Hmm five minutes later she is back in class. (numerous students well aware that she was in “in trouble again”). Plus, they pulled my 12 year old daughter out of her junior high school classroom and asked her “what they should do” she gave them some suggestions very similar to what we do at home and to call me their mother. They called my significant other who was on my list supposedly one time. He works from home, never got a call. Plus, the principal is very aware of who he is, and yes he could have dealt with the situation swiftly. He lives less than two minutes from the school and five or six houses away from from the principals brothers home. They called the second number and said that I gave them the a number to a business, hmm. Two and half hours later she is punished with two more days of staying in at recess. (Friday and a Monday). I was told I was lucky she didnt get a ten day suspension.

Now this is a kid who I believe is NLVD or possibly even a High Functioning Autistic person. Her family physician wants and has referred her to an ADHD clinic to hopefully get them to diagnose her and considers her to be mildly ADD and states that I am resistent to “medication” I actually am not but I am if I cant get the appropriate testing performed.

This child can imitate and sing to some of the best recording artists out there. She functions well at Art School. One of the Art Instructors called me aside earlier in the year and asked if my daughter had Asbergers. She is involved in sports: Soccer and Hockey both group sports, loves to swim. She can write a descriptive paragraph and or story but can’t spell worth a hoot, and her writing is barely readiable. Her math she is struggling with daily. She struggles greatly with change and disruption of her routine. Socially, she has no friends at least none who call or come over well unless I have her call and we do an outing at my cost that is, which I do and am not complaining about cost here either. She is not invited to birthday parties. On the playground she is picked first when it comes to teams but by the boys, which doesnt do her much good from the girls aspect of things. She is in the fourth grade and is the youngest fourth grader in the school system. A young nine year old, (August/1993)

I was threatened with putting her in an “enclosed one on one classroom for special education students”, by the principal. The two incident write up’s included the word “defy” in each paragraph. The principal also asked me at the last meeting if I planned on “Saving my Daughter all the Time” and my response was “Yes, as long as it takes for her to succeed”.

I have another IEP meeting (This Friday 01/17/03) to redo, they are also “evaluating” for her “third year review” at this time. The behavorial specialist is utilizing the BASE (Behavior Assessment System for Children). I have asked her if she planned on doing any visual assessment in different settings. She responded with “I doubt it”.

My daugther is an auditory learner and very visual. She didnt begin reading until late in second grade (we had a great teacher, who btw moved to another school the following year). She is also socially maladjusted if adjusted at all.

I personally believe that she did not understand “what was being asked of her when it came to them wanting her to remove her shirt and put on a different shirt”. She took it personally as if they were stating something negative about her father in Michigan.

I know this is not a very organized question or approach to asking for help but I read the above thread and couldnt help with responded for help and suggestions in a very ASAP manner.

Thanks much,
lisa

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 01/15/2003 - 1:55 PM

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Where other district are placing students in alternate programs for drug abuse and violence, your district is racking’em up for gum-chewing and not dressing out for gym? What do they do for the kids caught up with very poor choices-alcohol, drugs, life on the streets, fighting, inappropriate relationships? Yup, even in suburbia.

Wow, where are you? Alcatraz?? Nightmare on Elm Street? Or did you really, really *iss off these people?

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 01/15/2003 - 3:10 PM

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Kathytoo,

you may find the link to Martha Deckkla’s lecture of interest (see below). This is an address to a video recordings from NIH.

What I had found very interesting is when the ADHD boy defines what had helped him the most and it was Behavioral psychology approach. Martha Denckla elaborates a bit about that stating that it needs to be done in POSITIVE MODE- hence encouraging positive behavior and not only punishing bad ones.

I know it is really hard to do, but at least when setting up a behavioral plan for your son the school should design one with rewards rather than punishment only and you may cite Martha Deckla’s exact words to support that approach.

http://videocast.nih.gov

Once you are on the site, click on “Past Events.” Then type in the search box ‘Martha Denckla’ and then click Search. Three videocasts are listed
and hers is the third, “What ADHD Really Means…..” Then download. I noticed that on the main window they have a listing about RealPlayerOne,
which is the free player that you need to watch the videocast.

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 01/15/2003 - 4:52 PM

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kind of a control freak group of people trying to anticipate every hole in the dyke and then trying to plug it before it even breaks through!!!

Schools get paid by the number of kids attending daily and I know there is a big stink about parents who pull kids a few days early to get a jump on spring break travel-I know a few schools who have istituted similar attendance policies in the hope of stopping this. Of course, no one is addressing the fact of how many STAFF leave early for break and how all these kids are missing is subs showing movies. Like I said, wrong hole in the dyke!!!

Now, your son. I have a friend whose son was eventually dx’d ADHD in 7th grade who went through exactly this in 5/6. He was coming home with points for what appeared to be the piddliest things(not having a sharp pencil). Mom was irate but, I have to tell you, I understood what the teachers were talking about. The boy was very defiant to adults and many, many adults had been annoyed and frustrated with him over the years. It had hurt him in ways unbeknownst to mom(no way he was getting on all-stars, etc)and was often talked about behind the family’s back.

I also had not had my own son dx’d ADD at that time, and did not understand the disorder. But, as sympathetic as I am now, there probably is also some validity to the way I felt back then as it is how the average person sees things.

This boy lost points for ‘defiant body posture’ which set mom off(what is THAT?) but, again, I knew exactly what the teacher was saying. Is it chewing gum your son is getting in trouble for or his response to the teacher when asked to spit it out?? Is he quietly refusing to dress for gym(very typical teen thing)or is he arguing and making a public enough display that others are following his lead?

It isnt always the act itself that annoys the adult but the ‘attitude’ around it.

I would insist he be told exactly what he is doing wrong when he is doing it-exactly how many points are being deducted and why. I would also insist you receive a full description via email or letter of the incident. This way, if it is indeed an attitude, you can address it as a parent . And help him put together that it wasnt the gum chewing but “what he said”, “the look on his face”. Being informed 2 months later doesnt help anyone!!!!!

And, if Im totally off base, I apologize. But I do remember this time period with my friend and my inability to address it without threatening our relationship. Yet feeling that I wish there was some way I could help her understand!

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 01/15/2003 - 7:12 PM

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Kathy,

Are these rules and punishments clearly written down? If not then you should call them on not following rules.

If the rules are written down you might want to get a committee together to get the rules changed. Get a group together to speak to the principal. If you do not get anywhere calls to school board members and attending school board meetings might be inorder.

Helen

PS: My older son got some detentions last year and had to go to Saturday school from 8-12. He said it was kind of nice because he got it homework done and then was free for the next weekend. The V-P who handed out these detentions was something else. Turns out after the V-P left a male student came forward stating he had made sexual advances to the student twice. THe V-P finnally pleaded no contest and they now determining if he will have to register as a sex offender. He has moved to FL and I hope they make him resister because he will probably do it again otherwise.

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 01/15/2003 - 11:40 PM

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Hi Kathy:-)

Just read your post. Sounds like school year is a bit better then last?

I don’t have any good advice here. I suppose you know all the laws by now. It is sad your son likes the alternative school better,but maybe it’s because they actually accomodate the kids? I think I might look into it.

Again,you know the laws,I can’t wait for you to get out of this district. Keep me posted,take care:-)

Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 01/16/2003 - 2:49 PM

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Of course it is better. Anything is better than that place. Behavioural modification gone wrong. It reminds me about what they always say, “A little knowledge can be dangerous.”

They have very little knowledge how to correctly apply behavioral modification.

Start writing and don’t stop. I honestly would not even speak to them just write to them. If you speak to them at all make sure you put your interpretation about what was said in your own words and mail it to them.

Remember when you speak to them they put their interpretation about what is said in the file.

Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 01/16/2003 - 3:55 PM

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Don’t know where in FL but I’ll give you his name John Martin Nicoles known as Martin Nicoles. My guess is he would be looking to work in private schools or other groups that deal with kids.

Helen

Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 01/16/2003 - 9:05 PM

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I have read three seperate articles about how chewing gum improves memory. So maybe they shouldn’t outlaw it in the school.- Just a thought

Submitted by Anonymous on Fri, 01/17/2003 - 12:00 PM

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That’s why at my school last year when I found out her 5th grade resource (ESE) teacher who was going to take her out for her FCAT accomms. was a man, I said, ‘Hold up!”. I explained that I did not feel comfortable with a man having my daughter in a portable in the back of the school alone while she scribed to him for the FCAT. I told them I thought that was also unwise on their part.

Funny thing is the new ESE teacher this year turned out to be a woman. Don’t know if that was the reason, maybe it made them think.

I don’t think you can ever be too careful with your little ones.

Thanks for the heads up on Mr. Nicholes

Submitted by Anonymous on Sat, 01/18/2003 - 12:23 AM

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Funny that you should mention the chewing gum improving memory, when I found out my son had lost all those points for chewing gum and I was lecturing him, he said “it’s helps me concentrate”.
And just for the record, I wasn’t offened by any of the comments on how it might be his attitude more than the offesnses. I’m sure he doesn’t have the greatest attitude (he’s 14) and sadly he did
inherit my knack for the “eye rolling”. But basically, he is a good kid, very shy, won’t even eat lunch at school because he doesn’t want people to look at him. He’s played sports since he was 5 and all the coaches tell me they wish all the kids acted as well behaved as him, so I don’t really think he’s a “punk”.
I think it all goes back to my complaining, but I only complained to get him the education he was entitled to. But anyway, thanks for all the feedback. He served his time and we only have 18 more weeks to go in this school, so maybe we’ll make it through.
Thanks to everyone for your feedback.

Submitted by Anonymous on Sat, 01/18/2003 - 9:22 AM

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It wasn’t your actions that caused this; it REALLY is a lousy school. It has incompetant and ignorant management. Its zero tolerance thinking, ie-“if we don’t allow gum chewing, kids will never progress to drugs”. Anyone in education should know very well that there are no single,simple answers to kids. How much easier is it to deduct points than to speak privately with the kid, keep him after school to scrape gum and otherwise get involved with him on a real level? Good you have found somewhere else.

I wonder where all the other parents are? How sad.

Submitted by Anonymous on Sat, 01/18/2003 - 5:32 PM

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I posted last year about chewing gum and concentration. There were several different suggestions as to why. I think one was realated to SI and the other blood sugar. It sure helps my son concentrate better.

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