Our daughter, 9, is in 4th grade and her teacher recently called a conference regarding her grades. In the past, she attended a Montessori
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School-age children development up to kindergarten. Grades 1 & 2 were attended at a small, private
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School-age children development. Grade 1 was unremarkable, grade 2 unremarkable. She was tested and passed, but barely, for the gifted program in the public
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School-age children development system. We enrolled her in the gifted program, but pulled her out. It wasn't for her. Too challenging. Last year, third grade, I saw that she was having some problems. Her grades were dropping. On tests she would rarely get an F, some D's and C's and B's. Her teacher and I talked several times (at the teacher's request). Now, her 4th grade teacher says she is having
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Major-gesic focusing problems. She needs a lot of think time. She does not get her morning work done on time. Her tests and quizzes lately have been disasterous. But, the grades are over the place. She will get a B, then do horribly and get F's. I am talking in the 30% range. She can read well, but I don't think she is comprehending all. When she writes her answers for homework, she will answer in a one word sentence. Just enough to get it right. She misspells words constantly, even if the word she is writing is already on the page she is working on, or she has written it before on the same page. She is constantly erasing and rewriting due to the words being misspelled or the context of what has been written. She forgets to capitalize and punctuate sentences. Two days ago, she ripped up 4 tests that had failing grades and placed the ripped pieces into a garbage can in the bathroom. I found the
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Little tummys pieces of paper on the floor and confronted her. I was to sign these tests and she was to return them to the teacher. She was extremely upset when I asked her why she tore the tests up. She says her brain is stupid. She felt horrible, truly miserable. Her teacher has a masters in learning disabilities and does not think this is the case. She does have focusing issues and I felt that way last year. She will be doing her homework, and then ask me a question totally unrelated to what she is doing. Or tell a story about a friend. Her mind is not on her work and is playing elsewhere, if you know what I mean. She idolizes a friend in her current class, that was in her class last year, and constantly talks about her friend and how funny she is. She wants to be like this friend. I think her mind is elsewhere and not in
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School-age children development. She says she is trying. I am working with her everyday during homework time. The teacher says it should not take longer than an hour to complete. Yet, it will take her sometimes almost 3 hours. I don't want to hold her hand all the time with the homework. I think at this age she should be working on becoming more independent with that. Is this ADD? What is your opinion? Should I have her evaluated for a learning disability? Thanks for your time...
Kids know all around and maybe teasing her? At recess, at lunchtime, kids can have this amazing affect.
She came from a Montessori background and then sailed through the first couple of grades, then found out school is becoming hard, 'work' and not so easy. But the expectations from teachers and parents and herself still stayed very high. Everyone focusing on the grades, and pushing. That is what is 'sounds' like, I probably am off but anyway.... I feel so sorry for her, with the erasing thing going on. My stepson is incredibly gifted in math, but really really nonworking when it came to anything to do with creative writing or English or something like that. He would and could if you let him sit for hours and be totally blank if you asked him to finish a story, or finish a poem line.
It does sound like she is now in the upper primary grades experiencing understanding and it is not sounding like LAZINESS.
I would definitely get her tested and maybe it is a mild if there is such a thing, but a mild form of learning problem going on.
Maybe she needs glasses?. But with the erasing , it sounds like she has her OWN ideas of perfection and when nothing is coming easy, she will erase the page, hoping to erase HERSELF.
I would get her assessed for learning problems, and then the help she needs without regarding it a major major issue, or she will crown herself Queen of Stupid, maybe not outloud, but deep in her psyche, she will have more of a flop of self esteem. So to keep this whole thing LIGHT and 'NOT AN ISSUE', and don't talk in front of her, with her around, or about her , as she will pick up everything every little thing negative and grind this too, into her own self.
Woofy
If your daughter can't focus in class, then she needs to read the chapters, practice the problems, etc. etc. twice as much at home. You may need the teacher to help you with this at first. She may be overwhelmed with everything and have no idea how to get organized. There is more work in 4th grade. You won't know the social studies answers without reading or listening in class.
It sounds like your daughter is a smart girl she may just need some help getting organized.
Good Luck!
Then it all fell apart. I know the nightly homework struggle-HOURS upon hours to get something done that would have only taken 10 minutes had the crying, erasing, whining, pencil dropping and paper ripping not ensued. EVERY night.
Long story short--he wound up having ADD and a sensory integration disorder. Once he was diagnosed and receiving both medical and behavioural therapy, he did very well. One thing that helped us greatly was reduced homework assignments. If the assignment was for 10 math problems, he had 3--just enough so that I (and the teacher) could be sure he had the gist of what was being taught. Spelling lists were reduced to just a couple of harder words instead of 25 more common ones, and he had oral spelling tests, too (that helped a LOT). I can't think of all the things we did right now...there were a lot! He was encouraged to do a lot of his work on the computer--he was fully capable of spelling most words correctly on the computer, but something about putting pencil to the paper that he just couldn't do well. Most of his reports were to be done on the computer.
It was very, very hard and required a special IEP for him after he was diagnosed. Things went well until I'd say 7th grade--he could not handle the junior high routine and fell apart despite numerous attempts to modify his schedule. Things did not end well for him scholastically, emotionally, socially, or mentally is all I will say. Not that this is inevitable, but ADD and learning disorders are very complex, and I believe he did and does have a mental illness in addition to everything else. Add illegal drug use into the mix, and you have a recipe for a ruined life.
Get help early, stay involved, and BE WARY of middle school and its changing routine and how it affects your daughter. If I had it to do over, I would have pushed to keep him with ONE teacher in junior high instead of several--though this would have marked him as different, a key problem was so many teachers, teaching styles, expectations, and perceptions of what he "should" be doing.
Good luck!
concerned for you and us.