Originally Posted by incogneato
Originally Posted by Article
And although she was in every gifted program offered for her age we were told repeatedly that she needed to learn to fit in, be less arrogant, that �there are other kids just as smart as her,� �it�s a challenging curriculum,� �the teachers differentiate,� �just wait until high school, that�s when she�ll really soar� (this was in 4th grade�what should she do for the next four years?), �you can learn something in every class

We've had this exact experience....who else?

We got:
�there are other kids just as smart as h(im),�
�it�s a challenging curriculum,�
�the teachers differentiate,� ((And they did, as we moved along the advocacy process, still too little too late, though))

and then we got:
"Were you grade skipped? We find that parents who were gradeskipped often think that it's the only way to help a kid, but it isn't!"
and
"Our math specialist spent time with him, and he really isn't a deep thinker in Math." (This in 4th grade - all we were asking for was subject acc into 5 th grade math - like how much deep thought is required for 5th grade Math?)

But looking back, what alarms me the most, is that the school just seemed unable to believe that a child might have a 'mind of their own' during the elementary school years. Thankfully there is more of a recognition in Middle School that a child might have their own wants and needs seperate from the local Adult expectations. I want and expect my kid to express himself politely, and be kind to others, but, looking back, the very idea that he had a mind of his own seems to be what the finger pointing was mostly about.

((scary))
Grinity



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