Originally Posted by ABQMom
My son has in his IEP that he is allowed extra time to complete homework due to his dyslexia and dysgraphia. My son is telling me that the poems he had to do for a class were confusing and frustrating; he says he didn't understand the instructions. But the teacher is telling me my son is chatty in class and not making his best effort.

And I've seen both sides of him - the frustration and avoidance and being the class clown because he's compensating for not being able to complete a task, and then I've also seen him play the victim card to get out of trouble.

Agreed-- this is super-complicated.

A 2E has less natural inclination to get school tasks done, because they're harder for him than for the average person; avoidance really feels like a sensible path some of the time. And (in our 2E's case) he also has a less intuitive grasp of why he should make the effort to do a really bang-up job on things that he didn't choose and doesn't care about much.

There can also be the problem that he's learned what he can get away with, or teachers find it difficult to enforce standards and let certain things slide.

We are finding that DS can often rise to occasion, if expectations are spelled out with clarity (and reminders of those expectations issued). We are working hard to keep everyone's standards high and spell out the standards frequently. He plays the disability card, but AFAIK nobody at home or school is accepting that excuse. It's a lot of work keeping everyone's expectations coordinated and high, but I think it is paying off for DS9.

We have been talking about having him come to his next IEP meeting; on the one hand, discussion of deficits is so frank, and may be difficult to hear; on the other hand, he will know exactly why we are asking him to do certain things and what standards we are expecting him to meet.

And I don't think it's always determinably one or the other (slacking or disability); disability forms a complex of compensatory behaviors and ways of thinking around it that shapes the whole family (whole community, sort of). I think perhaps you could make this a topic of conversation with your DS and see how he feels about his own effort and productivity these days...

DeeDee