Fact: My child has a problem sitting still, staying on task, and being quiet during school. Fact: According to a professional child behavior therapist, my son does not exhibit any of the classic signs of ADD/ADHD Fact: My child is very bright Fact: My child makes straight A's Fact: My child does not steal, swear, hit, or otherwise physically disrespect either his teacher or classmates.
Yet, he is still being referred to the school's "Tier Three Behavior Intervention Program" where they hope to assign him "a behavior interventionist."
For the past month, my son has gotten written up almost every single day for such things as "rolling his eyes" and "breaking a pencil in half" which they wrote down as "outright defiance and disrespect." He raised his voice to another kid and told the other kid to "shut up" (he said the other kid picks on him alot and the teacher ignores it...but I take that with a grain of salt, he was probably frustrated because the other kid kept repeating "be quiet be quiet be quiet be quiet" over and over) and the teacher wrote him up and gave him in school suspension for "screaming and yelling at other students in the classroom."
I am fully aware that my child has *some* behavioral issues, but not to the extent that they are claiming. I think there is an element here of my son being singled out and labeled and they are trying to pass him in through the system just as quickly as they can by documenting EVERYTHING and "trying to show a repeated pattern of mis-behavior."
I have spoken with the teacher, and thought things were going to go well, as she seemed very nice, but she thinks my son needs to be medicated. (Her son is medicated.) I spoke to the assistant principal, who also thinks my son should be medicated (his son is medicated), and I have tried to explain that the process that they are using (singling out the student, putting him in all day in-school suspension which takes him out of the classroom, and assigning him a "behavior interventionist" to follow him around school) is not going to fix the problem, it's going to make it worse by separating him from his peers and damaging his self-esteem to the point where he is just not going to care anymore.
Even though my son is bright, because of all this teacher/administration escalation and discipline, my son is already stressed out....how long before the frustration that he "can do no right" catches up with him and he stops performing well on tests? My son misbehaved on Friday and his dad came to paddle him at school, and came to the house to paddle him again afterwards. The assistant principal knew this, but for some reason decided to give him ISS today, nearly 6 days later and after 2 days of excellent behavior in the classroom....I'm pretty sure they wanted to keep an un-broken chain of documentation...which is why, even after I informed the school in writing, that I had an appointment for my son with a professional to rule out ADD/ADHD and come up with our OWN behavioral plan, they went ahead and made a referral to community counseling ANYWAY. I think they were doing that for their documentation chain, even though, when I confronted the assistant principal about that today he told me it was an error on his part. I think the teacher and the assistant principal are dead set on whatever the ultimate goal is of this "behavior intervention" is, I can assure you that whatever it is it is not in the best interest of my child as they like to claim. If they were, then they would listen to the behavioral plan that the professional outlined for us, which means if my son is THAT disruptive at school, send him to the office and I or his father (who live 2 minutes away) will come and paddle him. Send home his behavior check-list every day and we will discipline or reward him accordingly. They are not giving us a chance to do anything on our own, as parents, they are attempting to take the entire matter into their own hands.
I'm not sure exactly what to do here, but I called to set up an appointment to talk to the Principal, and I'm hoping that he is somewhat more reasonable.
Advice?
PS---His teacher has been known to be a tad controlling, according to some of the other teachers....I saw her at church one week and smiled and said hi and asked if Taylor did well that day and she smiled and said yes. That week, on one of the administrative write-ups, she listed that interaction as "contact with the parent" regarding his behavior.
_________________ "Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own." Jesus of Nazareth
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