I am trying to work out some kinks with my son's program this year. He is an eighth grader, with a 504 plan (ADHD). His science teacher has kept him after school 3 times this fall to complete unfinished labs. BACKGROUND: My problem is that this teacher does not seem to care about accommodating student needs. It is his second year with her (small school, so there is only one science teacher for the junior high school) and ended last year with my son experiencing such anxiety on science days that he was experiencing headaches and stomach aches on science days. She also played a big part in my daughter, with autism, becoming so overwhelmed without the accommodations in her IEP being provided during junior high school that she shut down and was moved to an out-of-district placement.
Anyway, my son has had to stay after school to complete labs (he has no study hall). He says a big part of the issue is that he does not have a lab partner. the other students have lab partners, but his moved away. Now he has to complete the labs by himself. Something I've noticed about him when he is doing homework, is that he works a lot more efficiently with a "body double". He asks me a question, I reply with, "what do you think you have to do?", then he figures it out and keeps going . . . Is it appropriate to ask for an accommodation stating that he works with a lab partner? How would I phase that to make sure she places him with a non-distracting, relatively good student? (while science is currently his lowest grade, he is still on the high honor rolls and wants to remain there for the year)
Thank you for your suggestions. I have to be careful because the home-school connection had been damaged while trying to get the staff to comply with my daughter's accommodations and modifications. We've been through the state complaint process. The decision came out in my favor, but the district still denies that they have done anything wrong.
You can post now and register later.
If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.
Question
lclark
I am trying to work out some kinks with my son's program this year. He is an eighth grader, with a 504 plan (ADHD). His science teacher has kept him after school 3 times this fall to complete unfinished labs. BACKGROUND: My problem is that this teacher does not seem to care about accommodating student needs. It is his second year with her (small school, so there is only one science teacher for the junior high school) and ended last year with my son experiencing such anxiety on science days that he was experiencing headaches and stomach aches on science days. She also played a big part in my daughter, with autism, becoming so overwhelmed without the accommodations in her IEP being provided during junior high school that she shut down and was moved to an out-of-district placement.
Anyway, my son has had to stay after school to complete labs (he has no study hall). He says a big part of the issue is that he does not have a lab partner. the other students have lab partners, but his moved away. Now he has to complete the labs by himself. Something I've noticed about him when he is doing homework, is that he works a lot more efficiently with a "body double". He asks me a question, I reply with, "what do you think you have to do?", then he figures it out and keeps going . . . Is it appropriate to ask for an accommodation stating that he works with a lab partner? How would I phase that to make sure she places him with a non-distracting, relatively good student? (while science is currently his lowest grade, he is still on the high honor rolls and wants to remain there for the year)
Thank you for your suggestions. I have to be careful because the home-school connection had been damaged while trying to get the staff to comply with my daughter's accommodations and modifications. We've been through the state complaint process. The decision came out in my favor, but the district still denies that they have done anything wrong.
Thank you
3 answers to this question
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.