To ensure that your child is getting the best out of the education system, you have to be aware of his progress. A teacher can only do so much without the help of the parent and vise versa. In the end it is in best interest of the child to be on the same page and to offer solutions and follow through with them.
2007-02-22 04:45:26
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answer #1
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answered by trojan 5
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Ideally, it should affect the child for better if BOTH the parent and the teacher have listened carefully to the other and modify their actions/expectations based on such.
Example: If the teacher says, "Johnny is always disrupting class," and parent responds by saying, "Johnny is diagnosed ADHD," then the two should explore whether or not Johnny is on any medication, what time of day he takes it, whether it should be effective by the time Johnny gets into Teacher's class. If modifications need to be made to Johnny's medication/schedule, then the parent is obliged to contact the doctor and discuss that and get those changes underway. The teacher, meanwhile, can get out of "punishment" and "blame" mode for Johnny and attempt to get him involved in class in ways that take into account his ADHD.
Both the parent and the teacher are adults. All adults have a responsibility to guide a child to responsible adulthood. Parents and teachers should regard and treat each other as allies in this endeavor.
2007-02-22 04:48:30
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answer #2
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answered by katbyrd41 7
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if ya wag ya lessons a lot den da teacha wil ring up ya mum - simple..
2007-02-22 06:04:36
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answer #3
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answered by bad to the bone 5
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