I don't think you (Brent) have ever met my son Daniel but most all people that we come into contact with say how good of a kid that he is. He's polite, upbeat, responsible, but still a kid.
He's in 4th grade this year and so far we haven't had problems. 2nd and 3rd grade were pretty hard. The teachers (especially 3rd grade) could not handle him. I met and corresponded with them, the principle, and the TD teacher constantly. I went to class, lunch, whatever I could think of to make the situation better.
He is a gifted student and can ace many tests without ever seeing that type of work before. He is in the same class with the non-English speaking minorities. I know that he was bored a good bit. The TD program in place here has one teacher in his whole school who is responsible for his and many other's needs. I have a friend who has a master's in education and is a gifted student teacher and she has helped me a LOT in dealing with his teachers.
I've come to the conclusion that you get some good teachers and some bad ones. Stay very involved, write letters to the principle and copy the teacher and vice-versa, make her accountable for her actions regardless of the type of teacher that she has.
And yes, the teacher should be checking her progress especially when she knows that she has trouble completing her work in class. How long can you keep her on task without redirecting her every so often?
Teachers need to realize that the kids are still kids and do require adult supervision and guidance.
He's in 4th grade this year and so far we haven't had problems. 2nd and 3rd grade were pretty hard. The teachers (especially 3rd grade) could not handle him. I met and corresponded with them, the principle, and the TD teacher constantly. I went to class, lunch, whatever I could think of to make the situation better.
He is a gifted student and can ace many tests without ever seeing that type of work before. He is in the same class with the non-English speaking minorities. I know that he was bored a good bit. The TD program in place here has one teacher in his whole school who is responsible for his and many other's needs. I have a friend who has a master's in education and is a gifted student teacher and she has helped me a LOT in dealing with his teachers.
I've come to the conclusion that you get some good teachers and some bad ones. Stay very involved, write letters to the principle and copy the teacher and vice-versa, make her accountable for her actions regardless of the type of teacher that she has.
And yes, the teacher should be checking her progress especially when she knows that she has trouble completing her work in class. How long can you keep her on task without redirecting her every so often?
Teachers need to realize that the kids are still kids and do require adult supervision and guidance.


