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General Parenting
Teacher wants her to stay back a grade
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<blockquote data-quote="allhaileris" data-source="post: 263106" data-attributes="member: 5663"><p>THank you Jannie - that is very good feedback on why or why not to keep her back. I appreicate that input, exactly what I was looking for.</p><p> </p><p>I've been told she gets worked up about math and is nervous around the other kids. I've brought computer games home and she refuses to do them. If I throw out little things here or there to help her think about math she does fine (like some movie the other day the girl said she was almost 12, and E said "oh, she's 11" or if I just say what a flashcard would say, she's better than if it's written down). She has to add by counting, the memorization to keep the fact isn't there. </p><p> </p><p>Emotionally she's doing so-so, but I think with the speech delay and other stuff she's doing okay on gaining maturity like her peers are doing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="allhaileris, post: 263106, member: 5663"] THank you Jannie - that is very good feedback on why or why not to keep her back. I appreicate that input, exactly what I was looking for. I've been told she gets worked up about math and is nervous around the other kids. I've brought computer games home and she refuses to do them. If I throw out little things here or there to help her think about math she does fine (like some movie the other day the girl said she was almost 12, and E said "oh, she's 11" or if I just say what a flashcard would say, she's better than if it's written down). She has to add by counting, the memorization to keep the fact isn't there. Emotionally she's doing so-so, but I think with the speech delay and other stuff she's doing okay on gaining maturity like her peers are doing. [/QUOTE]
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