princessmom29
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 3, 2008
- Messages
- 8,520
I never said that my kids are not learning what they need to learn. Personally I don't think education happens only in school. It is my job to see my kids get a good education not the schools. It is my job to parent my children not the schools.
The OP was wanting advice. I was just telling my experience without medicating my kids.
If you cannot trust your child's teachers to provide effective guidance and truly have your child's best interests at heart mabye they are in the wrong school. I say this because as an educator I see it as impossible to teach children all day without taking on at least some of the roles of a parent. Like it or not you surrender some of the duites of shaping the person your child will be to his/her teachers. Lots of parents have major problems accepting that fact. They dio not like the idea that anyone other than themselves should have a positive impact on their kids. I think it is often a control issue.
Teachers really do know your children. At least the good ones do. They spend eight hours a day with them, and most of them make the recommendation that your child be evaluated or treated not because the want to "label your child" or because they don't like that they are "outside the box", but because they are truly concerned about your child and want to see them succeed. I get really tired sometimes of hearing parents say that the schools and teachers are self serving and just want to pigeonhole kids. If you children are in a school that is truly like that, you should consider moving them. I truly care about the students I teach and want to see them be the best that they can be. When I suggest that a parent talk to a doctor I do so out of concern for a child and because I have observed warning signs that concern me. I am NOT qualified to diagnose a child, but I have been trained as to what to look for in a child as ADD/ ADHD warning signs that signal that they should be professionally evaluated.
It is my experience that some children are not helped by medication, but some children significantly improve on meds. If I were faced with an ADD/ADHD diagnosis for my daughter an meds could help my child function better in school and have more positive interaction with peers, you can bet I would at least try them.
They say it's more of a "true" test score because the parents can't drill the story into the kids. Whatever.