Oct 25, 2008

Parent-Teacher Conference Nightmare

Last Thursday afternoon I had Kristin's first parent-teacher conference. Unfortunately I left mad and have continued to get more mad. Ok, before I go on about the conference, I have to give the backstory. Most of you know that two years ago Kristin was diagnosed ADHD, which came as no surprise to us, and she has taken Strattera everyday since then and has done great with it. Siloam schools do not allow you to request a certain teacher for your child so I wrote a letter to the school just telling them about Kristin and that she has to have a teacher who will be loving, yet firm, who will be consistent and keep her focused. When I found out she had Mrs. Thomas, I thought it would be a good match. Mrs. Thomas is an older teacher who is known for being a little tough with the kids, but fun. So, at open house I told Mrs. Thomas all about Kristin, that she is on medicine, but still needs help staying focused and that she like to talk....all the time (I have no clue where she gets that :) ). I gave her all of my phone numbers, e-mail, and asked her to let me know if Krisitn has any problems. I heard nothing, Kristin was gettting good behavior reports, etc. Well, last month it was time for Kristin's Strattera check-up. I e-mailed Mrs. Thomas, told her Kristin was going to the doctor for her meds and to let me know how she's doing in class. I heard nothing. The day that I was taking Kristin to the doctor, she called me and told me Kristin does not listen, pay attention, do her work, and talks all the time. I said ok and that I would let the doctor know. Meanwhile I'm thinking, why is she getting good behavior reports if she's having all these problems? We go to the doctor and she decides to raise the dosage of Strattera a little since she's grown so much since last year. The next day I wrote a letter to Mrs. Thomas about the new dosage and to please let me know how she does..good, bad, no change, whatever, I need to know. I heard nothing, Kristin got great behavior reports, so I think things are great.

Last Thursday was the conference. Mrs. Thomas starts in on how Kristin is just out of control, does not listen, talks all the time, does not finish her work, does not know her sight words and is just having all kinds of problems. Why am I just now hearing about it???? She wanted to know if we started new medicine and I said it's the same medicine just new dosgae (did she read my note?). Then she said "well shouldn't that stop everything?" At this point, I was really getting mad because she was already talking bad about Montessori children and how they cannot handle the structure of public schools (hello, I am a Montessori teacher and she knows it!). I told her that the medicine just helps her to better control her impulsions, focus, etc, but that she still needs help, there is nothing to just "make it go away or stop." From what I gathered from the teacher, when Kristin talks when she's not supposed to, she just tells her to stop, there is no other consequence. Kristin has to have immediate consequences. Mrs. Thomas said she doesn't remember what she's supposed to be doing after directions are given and I told her she will have to tell her more than once and then check to make sure she's doing the work. If not, make her do it. If the teacher isn't checking to make sure she's doing her work, then of course she's going to talk or draw or whatever else she'd rather be doing instead. I suggested that she have Kristin sit at a desk by herself. She didn't like that idea but said she'd try it. I asked Kristin if she sat by herself yesterday and she said no, she was in her same spot.

I talked to Shawn a lot about it (her daughters are in the 5th grade and are both ADHD). I'm writing a letter to the teacher telling her things that have and have not worked for Kristin in the past. I'm going to give it a week, if I continue to now hear anything from her, I'm going to talk to the principal. That's what really makes me mad in all of this...I've asked numerous times for her to please let me know how Kristin is doing and she doesn't do it. The preschool I teach at is literally right across the street for the kindergarten school, so she has many ways to get in touch with me. It also bothers me that she told Kristin that I would be dissapointed in her and mad after the conference (Kristin didn't want to go home..she thought she'd be in trouble). I would never tell that to one of my kids. She made it clear to me that she does not like Montessori teaching and I figure since she's and "old school" teacher, she probably doens't believe ADD even exists. I really don't think she's taking any time with Kristin. On the report card there were several things Kristin has known forever that the teacehr says she doesn't know..days of the week, colors, rec. numbers 1-10. It's just crazy. So, that's been my past few days...mad and frustrated. As a teacher I know how hard it is to have to keep remining a child to their work, or to be quiet, or to keep checking up on them. I've got two in my class that I have to constantly stay on top of or they will be off somewhere doing who knows what, and I've got other children I have to teach too, but that's just part of it!

Ok, I'm done vernting now and feel much better. Kristin spent the night last night with Shawn and her girls...she will probably never want to come home!

3 comments:

Mandy said...

I'm so sorry! That sounds horrible. I would have been so mad that I would have made myself sick! There is no excuse for that! Why would she be getting such good behavior reports?! Crazy!
I really hope it improves.


I hear horror stories all the time and I am very seriously considering home-schooling Sawyer. At least in the beginning.

c said...

OK Is this teacher a NUT or what? Here are my suggestions
1) document every time you have requested information from the teacher with no reply.
2) Point out the times you have requested information to her and have not received a reply.
3) Point out the suggestions you have given this teacher but she refused to try.
4) You have to talk with the principal! It is her job to reply to you with information when you are not present to see it yourself. Also, I would address the issue of her telling Kristen you would be mad. That is crazy!! You never say that to a child - she has no idea how you would react.
5) When talking with the principal try to keep personal feelings at a minimum - hard I know but stick to facts not opinions. But also point out that you are there for Kristen's best interest not the teachers. You do not want Kristen hating school at such a young age.
6) I would want the conference documented - she is allowed a 504 plan since she has ADHD. She should be allowed modifications for learning and the learning environment. Such as a quiet place or to be remove from situations in which she looses control. This protects Kristen and the teacher as long as the teacher is following the 504 plan. If she does not then you have legal recourse to the school and teacher. Basically look at as protection. You may know all of this but if not call me and I can explain it to you.
7) I would want to know that the Principal is going to follow through and get back with you about the progress or lack of progress. I would set a date for him/her to get back with you to let you know how things are going.

You can call me anytime for recommendations and suggestions. I can tell you the legal side of it and the classroom side of things too. Hang in there and most importantly let Kristen know how much she loved but that you do not agree with the way her teacher handled certain situations. I had to do that with Anna. I am huge supporter of the teacher but when a teacher says something inappropriate to a child you have to let them know you do not agree and that it is ok to not agree. Hard lessons at such an early age!

Sorry so long but I wanted to address this post since my job is all tied up in this stuff!

Alison said...

I agree with Cassie on this. You as a parent are informing the teacher and it appears that she is not interested in what you have to say. As a teacher turned princpal's daughter, parents need to feel that they can work with the teacher for the best interest of the child. I hope if you do not see changes soon, that the princal will be able to do something about it.