Dude and Minx,
Thanks for the much-needed laugh. Glazed eyes or rolled eyes. Either way, there's not much of a reception. That's why I'm trying to tell a story, with data sprinkled in.
I'm TRYING not to bitter. DS would say "use a honey voice, not a vinegar voice." At least he's learned that much in class. Great - they've taught him how to be a MORE persuasive negotiator. And he was already killing me.
Sue
You're welcome. We have not had good luck with public schools, and only a little with the private Montessori. At least they would let him work ahead of his age. In kindergarten in MA, supposedly a very good school district, the teacher called on a Saturday to see how DS was enjoying school. So...I asked him and he reported he was bored, so I told her. She said, "Impossible! He doesn't even know the letter sounds yet!" I turned to DS, tactful as ever, and asked him. He said he did, and I dutifully reported back (she was waiting on the phone during this) that he did know all his letter sounds. Also, did it really matter since he was then reading Harry Potter (the first one)? That was probably not the best tack.
We had a meeting, during which the teacher informed me that the Reading Specialist said he was unable to read. Since I had objective evidence that he could in fact read and they had not told me they would be sending him to anyone for testing, I asked DS about it. He was overcome with the combination of the injustice at having to leave mid-activity (and at the end of the day) to talk to a teacher he never met and did not know in order to demonstrate that he could do something he'd been doing for two years already. So...he banged his head on the desk instead of reading.
Hello, Montessori school! Things were okay there although there was some bullying by the sixth-graders which was unanticipated.
For second grade, we were in Silicon Valley; surely a place where they will cherish intellectual genius. The principal was offended that I had the audacity to question her teacher's differentiation tactics which consisted of having him tutor other students in math and giving him a 4th grade reader. When I asked for him to be considered for acceleration and provided them a copy of the IAS, they refused to even consider using it and subjected him to a battery of tests designed to make him fail.
I know I sound dramatic with reference to the tests but they did things like copy the teacher's copy of the math test for him to use as the test. The top problem took up two-thirds of the page, then there was a tiny second problem, and then the teacher directions. DS did not even notice the second problem and they never even questioned WHY he didn't answer them. They just assumed he couldn't. This from a teacher who miscalculated the basic percentage of right answers on his English test, erroneously giving him a grade of 85% instead of the 96% he actually answered correctly.
They tested him with the DRA and because he did not specifically state, "This is a biography of Mahatma Gandhi". they did not give him the point. His words were something to the effect of Mahatma Gandhi using hunger strikes to change the behavior of his country.
In addition to this, the principal noted that she approached a group of kids whom DS was leading through a game and inquired as to what they were doing. DS told her. She then told me that he was not LETTING anyone else answer; he didn't prevent anyone from answering but he WAS the leader du jour so he answered when she addressed the group at large.
He was seen carrying a smaller boy (my son is easily the biggest kid in his classroom and stands a head taller than most of the kids) on the playground and promptly chastised. No one could explain WHY he was carrying the boy. When I questioned him, Sean had fallen and hit his head; he was in quite a bit of pain so DS was taking him to the office. At that point, I did what the playground monitor SHOULD have done and explained to him that we don't move hurt people because it could hurt them more but that he did the right thing trying to help. These things, and his handwriting, are what prevented my son from being accelerated a grade so he wasted a year of his life being bored to tears and stomachaches.
But you know...I'm not bitter. ;-)