BeckyScott
<font color=magenta>I am still upset that they don
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 1,127
Awww, he doesn't want to buy a baby. The initial cost is bad enough, but the maintenance, whoa
. You know, we'd all be freakin' rich if it wasn't for these little beasties in our houses, with their $3/bag Tinky noodles and $80 iCoasters and probably $400 worth of Pixar DVDs. Child tax credit, my butt, that's not even close to what they cost.... 
Slightly
but a couple weeks ago a local chiro spoke at the autism play group, and he sounded very DAN-ish. Another mom & I asked him if he'd gone to the DAN conference (he isn't listed on their website) and that he really needed to go to it 'cause he sounded just like one of the. I took DS to see him yesterday and he's decided to go to the DAN conference this spring. So we'll have a local DAN! No more 2 hour drives! hoo hoo!
Back on topic. I am having trouble (and this isn't a new problem) with the kids just not liking school. Last week youngest DS had a very bad week, not motivated in the least, didn't get work done, needed constant prodding and then only produced the minimum necessary. It's beyond bribing or punishing. I can do that. But they genuinely don't like school. It makes me sad, and I don't know what to do to help. Bribing them isn't effective, as they both dislike school so much that they don't even care about a reward. And even then... I don't necessarily wanting them to be good students just to get an extra buck, I want them to like learning. And there are parts of it they do like, but not much.
I am hoping as they get older and have more input as to what classes they choose, that it will get better. But really even in high school and college you still have to take core classes.
I don't know if this is typical, or if it's part of the umbrella and needs to be handled differently, or if there's really nothing I can do. If it's just that neither child is "another brick in the wall"
and as such, they're never going to be really happy in that whole traditional way of education. Or if they've both decided they just don't care, period, and I need to step in and get hard-core with it.


Slightly

Back on topic. I am having trouble (and this isn't a new problem) with the kids just not liking school. Last week youngest DS had a very bad week, not motivated in the least, didn't get work done, needed constant prodding and then only produced the minimum necessary. It's beyond bribing or punishing. I can do that. But they genuinely don't like school. It makes me sad, and I don't know what to do to help. Bribing them isn't effective, as they both dislike school so much that they don't even care about a reward. And even then... I don't necessarily wanting them to be good students just to get an extra buck, I want them to like learning. And there are parts of it they do like, but not much.
I am hoping as they get older and have more input as to what classes they choose, that it will get better. But really even in high school and college you still have to take core classes.
I don't know if this is typical, or if it's part of the umbrella and needs to be handled differently, or if there's really nothing I can do. If it's just that neither child is "another brick in the wall"
