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<blockquote data-quote="JulienSam" data-source="post: 144796" data-attributes="member: 4575"><p>CLB4</p><p></p><p>First, Welcome! </p><p></p><p>As a parent, I appreciate seeing posts from an educator -- it warms my heart to know that there are educators (esp. administrators) that are so concerned with their students.</p><p></p><p>I can kind of relate to the mom in your case -- It's so defeating to pick up your child from school and EVERY time have to hear about that day's problem and sign an Incident Report. But my DS (5 yr old Sam) has a very loving teacher who is so patient with- him, and cares for him very much. Her support gets me through the bad news.</p><p></p><p>It's too bad that the mom can't see that her child's problems in school could be related to something off with the child -- not the school. I'm preaching to the choir here, but it's so important to have that open communication to make sure school/parents are supporting each other in what they do for the child -- solutions won't work if not everyone's committed to the plan.</p><p></p><p>I agree with- SRL -- sometimes it takes an outside voice to really get through to people. I hope your parent comes to see the light and changes her mind about receiving the help offered to her child -- getting him the help he needs now at a young age will surely make a huge impact on him down the road.</p><p></p><p>Wish I had some better advice, but just know that there are parents who really appreciate teachers & administrators who sincerely care about our kids and want them to succeed as much as we do.</p><p></p><p>((HUGS))</p><p></p><p>Julie</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JulienSam, post: 144796, member: 4575"] CLB4 First, Welcome! As a parent, I appreciate seeing posts from an educator -- it warms my heart to know that there are educators (esp. administrators) that are so concerned with their students. I can kind of relate to the mom in your case -- It's so defeating to pick up your child from school and EVERY time have to hear about that day's problem and sign an Incident Report. But my DS (5 yr old Sam) has a very loving teacher who is so patient with- him, and cares for him very much. Her support gets me through the bad news. It's too bad that the mom can't see that her child's problems in school could be related to something off with the child -- not the school. I'm preaching to the choir here, but it's so important to have that open communication to make sure school/parents are supporting each other in what they do for the child -- solutions won't work if not everyone's committed to the plan. I agree with- SRL -- sometimes it takes an outside voice to really get through to people. I hope your parent comes to see the light and changes her mind about receiving the help offered to her child -- getting him the help he needs now at a young age will surely make a huge impact on him down the road. Wish I had some better advice, but just know that there are parents who really appreciate teachers & administrators who sincerely care about our kids and want them to succeed as much as we do. ((HUGS)) Julie [/QUOTE]
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