Re: Student Recommendations
    Posted by: My 2 cents is right on 1/12/15
    () Comments

    Sticky situation. Would it be possible to suggest student would
    likely need to apply for student services (disabilities office) to
    assist with academic needs? Colleges & universities are
    prohibted by law that they are disallowed to suggest/offer DA
    services to struggling students. Students, after age 18, have to
    advocate for theirselves on their own.

    Most professors will NOT be sympathetic toward below level
    students. They feel you should be ready to go with little
    assistance from DA office. This would not be considered lying but
    merely stating this student have had academic struggles and
    needed (services).

    On 1/11/15, Curious wrote:
    > On 1/11/15, please explain wrote:
    >> I am confused about why anyone would mix up being on an
    > ARD
    >> committee with being asked to give a recommendation to a
    > private
    >> school? When a family approaches a private school, and I
    know
    >> this because I have investigated many private schools for my
    >> child, most private schools provide a application packet which
    >> includes a recommendation form to be filled out by the
    > teachers
    >> of major courses. The parent then passes these out to the
    >> current teachers. It is likely that the parents want a
    >> particular teacher to follow through with sending it in because
    >> the parents perceive that teacher to have a positive
    >> relationship with the student and they foresee that teacher
    >> making positive comments. The recommendation form
    > specifically
    >> asks that it be sent to the private school directly. As a
    >> teacher in public, I have filled out many of these forms and I
    >> was truthful. I sent it in a sealed envelope to the school.
    >> This has nothing to do with legal obligations as an ARD
    > member.
    >> The recommendation forms that I have filled out merely ask if
    >> the student receives any special services: yes or no. Those
    >> forms do not ask for any delicate information. Please explain
    >> why being on an ARD committee or not being on one would
    > matter
    >> in this case.
    >>
    >>
    >> On 1/10/15, my 2 wrote:
    >>> A recommendation for private school goes in a sealed
    > envelope,
    >>> mailed by the teacher, to the private school. At that point,
    >>> it is not revealed to the parents. I don't get what the issue
    >>> is. A person can refuse to give a recommendation. The
    >>> private school will use other items such as test scores on
    >>> tests that they give, and in my son's case, an interview that
    >>> was extensive. I would not worry that the school will accept
    >>> this student. There is one caveat. If the private school
    >>> wants to accept this student because they want the parents'
    >>> money, then they will do so no matter what the
    > recommendation
    >>> says anyway, which might be the case. If that is the case, so
    >>> what?
    >>>
    >>>
    >>>
    >>> On 1/10/15, Curious wrote:
    >>>> A person in my department is being pressured by the
    > family
    >>> of a SpEd student
    >>>> to give a recommendation for an elite professional school.
    >>> This student has
    >>>> been provided with an enormous amount of support and
    > her
    >>> IEP's water down
    >>>> even some of the basic skills and principles of the classes
    >>> involved. Sadly, the
    >>>> administration is terrified of the parents because one is a
    >>> well connected
    >>>> lawyer.
    >>>>
    >>>> This student, who I have also had in class, has a low IQ, is
    >>> limited in every
    >>>> aspect of reading, writing and speaking. In addition the
    >>> student has other
    >>>> disorders which her parents have taken pains to avoid
    >>> revealing to the student
    >>>> who is now nearly 18. The parents have basically
    > demanded
    >>> every kind of
    >>>> implementation available, to the point of even threatening
    >>> standardized
    >>>> testing organizations if they don't allow the student to
    >>> exercise all of the IEP
    >>>> demands that include extended time, access to dictionary
    > and
    >>> more. They
    >>>> didn't ask me for a recommendation because I was very
    >>> straightforward about
    >>>> this student's abilities. The teacher in my department is a
    >>> very sweet lady who
    >>>> is dealing with a number of personal issues and the family
    >>> and administration
    >>>> are using this opportunity to bully her into a
    >>> recommendation. So LEGALLY,
    >>>> can the administration force the teacher to do this?
    >
    > We are talking about a college level education facility, not a
    > private training school. As for the ARD committee, this is not
    > being driven by the ARD committee, but by the parents and by
    > the administration in an attempt to placate them. They want the
    > teacher to assure the college that the student is capable of
    doing
    > the work, which the student is not. We have had students at the
    > college before and are well aware of the expectations. Having
    > had the student previously, I know that the parents believe the
    > student is capable of regular ed work. They are asking the
    > teacher to lie.


    Posts on this thread, including this one

  • Student Recommendations, 1/10/15, by Curious.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 1/10/15, by my 2.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 1/11/15, by EasTexSteve.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 1/11/15, by Agreed East Tx Steve.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 1/11/15, by please explain.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 1/11/15, by Curious.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 1/11/15, by Learntoread.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 1/12/15, by My 2 cents is right.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 1/12/15, by from my 2 again.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 2/03/15, by PsyGuy.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 2/03/15, by PsyGuy.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 2/03/15, by PsyGuy.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 2/03/15, by PsyGuy.
  • Re: Student Recommendations, 2/03/15, by PsyGuy.