cabanafrau
DIS Legend
- Joined
- May 10, 2006
- Messages
- 15,705
I see, you're correct, I did mix up the daughter's preference over the course of the thread, which I understood originally and somehow crossed up with something I subsequently read. I do think her preference has to be carefully listened to, and what's at the heart of it understood clearly. Exactly what's behind the therapist's opinion also should be thoroughly understood. If the basis is truly rooted in the wellbeing of the daughter the recommendation should factor into the plan for a way forward. There's no upside to homeschooling a kid if that type of situation isn't suitable for her. (I'm not saying it's not suitable. I'm not saying homeschooling is bad. I'm saying I don't understand the reasoning for such a strong recommendation.) If it's simply anti-homeschool it carries no weight as far as sorting out a solution -- however I would absolutely pursue professional ramifications against the therapist as I outlined above if she's not advocating in her patient's best interest and simply imposing her bias without regard to her patient's needs.Have you read anything the OP has said? Have you looked at any of the context of the comments you quote? Maybe read it again. The entire issue is the child is miserable and is asking her to be pulled out of her school - because of the social situation there. People pick the school situation that fits their family. Some can't or don't want to homeschool, and so they send kids to a brick and mortar school. That is the way things are, not a judgement about them.
This is silly. You are cherry picking parts of what I am saying, ignoring the things that give it any context and arguing that YOUR anecdotes are more valuable. You can look up data about teen suicide and schools playing a part if you would like because it's out there. Yes, it is completely valid to bring up that school mis-match contributes as there is data for it and the OP is trying to decide where her child should be. No, I've never said there aren't also problems with homeschooling, and I've been very up front that there can be. The "homeschoolers can be social" was in response to a post about homeschooling meaning losing out on social activities, and was to point out that homeschool does NOT mean being locked in a room alone. Schools are far from the only place to get social interactions.
Yes, if someone is talking about how many people struggle and have a difficulty with a situation so it's ok to look at choices, someone popping in to say "my family was so happy and had the best experience" IS rubbing it in that they lucked out when the other didn't. I don't know why you seem to want to pick at me. I have no problem with schools. Some people have a rough time and need help finding out what their choices are. Clearly you don't actually want the OP to hear from anyone who has had similar experiences to her.
Bottom line is still the same, a solution has to be sorted out to provide this girl a great education and offer her sufficient social outlets to satisfy those needs. That could be homeschool. That could be her current school if things can be properly sorted out and she's willing to branch out her activities and involvement to open up other social channels. That could be a fresh start in a different school. Hopefully a good solution can be found quickly and OP's DD can be happily on her way through HS.