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Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
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An example. more than 25 years ago in junior school I had trouble understanding franctions. I mean REAL trouble, I could not get my head around them. Everyone else in the class could but not me. After several attempts, the teacher gave up. When my parents could see I was making no progress they contacted the school to ask the teacher what was happening. Her response "Well, he did fall behind and we had to move on". My parents went ape. Rather than contact them to suggest some possible out-of-hours schooling or or other methods, she simply brushed me aside. To this day I still have trouble with fractions. I genuinely believe if she had actually tried instead of making life easier for herself, I'd have a better understanding. She couldn't even be bothered to offer a suggestion. She didn't even see fit to contact my parents, she was happy to brush me out of the way. Back to this story. The teaching assistant clearly has no understanding of how to deal with children. This indicates to me she should not be in charge of them. It's nobody's fault but her own. She could have requested assistance or even training as soon as she knew of the girl's condition. There are some really good teaching staff out there but truly there are some abysmal ones. |
Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
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Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
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Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
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Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
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Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
My problem is not so much with the way the child behaved but the unfair criticism of the teaching assistant.
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Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
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I have a feeling I know rather more about SEN provision than you ever will. |
Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
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How lazy are you planning to be today? If you really gave a smeg you could have googled an encyclopaedia's worth of information by now. The information is out there, and teachers and assistants who know they have an autistic child in their classroom *should* have taken the time to find it and action it. |
Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
If schools have children with special needs then they should have staff trained in looking after children with special needs seems simple to me. Then if anything like this happens the child can be removed from the lesson and to the trained staff or if possible the trained staff can come to them. I see no reason why all staff can not be given some training after all they have plenty of teacher training days it seems rediculas to me that they do not cover this
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Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
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Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
I am not saying they need to be fully trained but some training would go a long way
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Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
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If it was something obvious that was upsetting her, it would have been easier to resolve the situation. But it wasn't something obvious and probably only became known long after the event. Quote:
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Re: teacher shut autistic girl a tiny room
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Her mother is a supply teacher, so should she have to undergo a week's training for each of the many potential situations prior to teaching in a particular school? |
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Who is talking about 'potential situations'? A child with special needs was in the class. She had no idea how to deal with special needs. End of. |
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