Mickey'snewestfan
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2005
- Messages
- 4,716
I'm all for participation but the one thing missing here is how your DS feels about the way things went. Not all kids like the spotlight and some are much happier being worker bees in the background which is what Stage Crew is I think. I understand you would have liked your DS to be part of the mix and would have liked them to give him a push towards trying but maybe your DS was more stressed about this than you realize. Maybe his teachers saw this and let him be who he is. Not everyone is comfortable with throwing themselves out there to be criticized... I know I always hated it. Did your DS ever complain to you about his position or was he content?
Stage Crew is not what I'm upset about, first of all it was an extracurricular so it makes sense to have auditions, and secondly he did something and contributed something. I actually gave it as an example of the fact that he can participate and chooses to participate (I didn't make him do the play at all). If there were the equivalent of stage crew in the classroom I'd be fine. For example, if he made the poster explaining the science concept and someone else talks, or he wrote the questions and answers for the Jeopardy game, or wrote some of the poetry that was up on the wall but didn't read it aloud).
As far as them recognizing this "stress", then they have a responsibility to tell me. It's not like they haven't had 15 parent teacher conferences, 10 report cards, and 2 child study teams (which I requested so that we could look into the issue, and at which they insisted that he was "fine" and that it was just a coincidence and he'd be chosen next time).
This time every kid that came to the science showcase explained something scientific/did something scientific except mine -- they didn't all have 3 things or 4 things to do like his best friend, but every other 5th grader had at least one. Most of them had artwork, posters, etc . . . on display -- I didn't actually check to see if if was everyone.
As far as whether he wants to, he never complains about not doing it, but he was so excited about the Spanish poem (which the whole class recited in unison) practicing in front of the mirror, telling me "I'll be on the right, look for me", he chose to audition for the play . . . I don't know that he's dying to do these things, but I do thing he was willing to do them.