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General Parenting
Today's incident.
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<blockquote data-quote="klmno" data-source="post: 380800" data-attributes="member: 3699"><p>I could be completely off base so take this with a grain of salt- but I'm thinking they might be looking at it like this- if he can't respond to any consequences or punishment or re-direction to do what he should without ultimately resorting to physical rebellion, then he can't be in a mainstream school. They are calling in legal authorities to document and back that up. If he has reached that point I think you are going to have to give a little acknowledgement to the school in order to not shoot yourself in the foot trying to fight for appropriate placement and accommodations. If you come across as a parent just expecting teachers to cater to your child and revolve their whole day around him and what he's willing to do at that point in time, I think it might do you more harm than good. It can come across to legal authorities as making excuses and therefore, enabling him to be this way. If you acknowledge that this is the situation but nevertheless, it is the sd's responsiblity and legal requirement to educate him, then you have a valid legal point. That's JMHO.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="klmno, post: 380800, member: 3699"] I could be completely off base so take this with a grain of salt- but I'm thinking they might be looking at it like this- if he can't respond to any consequences or punishment or re-direction to do what he should without ultimately resorting to physical rebellion, then he can't be in a mainstream school. They are calling in legal authorities to document and back that up. If he has reached that point I think you are going to have to give a little acknowledgement to the school in order to not shoot yourself in the foot trying to fight for appropriate placement and accommodations. If you come across as a parent just expecting teachers to cater to your child and revolve their whole day around him and what he's willing to do at that point in time, I think it might do you more harm than good. It can come across to legal authorities as making excuses and therefore, enabling him to be this way. If you acknowledge that this is the situation but nevertheless, it is the sd's responsiblity and legal requirement to educate him, then you have a valid legal point. That's JMHO. [/QUOTE]
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