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“She wants a real diploma. She doesn't want a piece of paper,” Adams said.
Where did my post go. I thought it was funny. I guess you guys are all up on your high horses.
It think the fair thing to do is make her go back through high school. How do you not know that you are in the special classes unless you are special? Did she get straight A's? She should have.
I feel bad for this girl, I really do, but, didn't she notice she was in the wrong classes? What about her parents? You can't sit back and hope your child gets educated correctly. I know we all should be able to do that, but, we're not. The parents are just as guilty as the school system is. If my child were placed in a special ed class, I'd be into the school immediately to figure out why, what the problems were and what I needed to do at home to help her out. I'm not saying she should have to repeat high school by any means, but, it's not all the school's fault.
“She wants a real diploma. She doesn't want a piece of paper,” Adams said.
If the parents really had no idea about their daughter being in SpEd classes, a TON of fail-safes in the school system failed. Either that, or the parents are completely clueless, and/or didn't care until it was their own fault and are trying to pass the buck.
I'm wondering if they have parent-teacher conferences in that school system. I don't remember much about them from my own high school, but you'd think if they had even ONE in that 4 years, the parents should have been able to figure out what kind of classes the girl was taking.
Or the parents could have taken a little interest in their daughter's life and asked her about her classes. That might have helped.
There's more than that the schools need to do legally. Namely notifying parents that they are testing their student BEFORE they admit them into the SpEd curriculum. Then the parents (and many times the student) are involved in the creation of the IEP/504 Plan. Then there are parent/school meetings about yearly progress of the student on the IEP. Then theres term progress reports. Etc. Etc. Unless ALL of those failed on some level, the parents had to have known about it before it got to this point.
If the parents really had no idea about their daughter being in SpEd classes, a TON of fail-safes in the school system failed. Either that, or the parents are completely clueless, and/or didn't care until it was their own fault and are trying to pass the buck.
A Gwinnett County teenager will have to spend another four years in high school while other teens her age go to college
....she had a IQ score of 91. I don't think she was going on to further schooling anyway.
This statement makes it sound like the girl could be going to college right now instead.....she had a IQ score of 91. I don't think she was going on to further schooling anyway.
This statement makes it sound like the girl could be going to college right now instead.....she had a IQ score of 91. I don't think she was going on to further schooling anyway.