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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to send this email to the teachers re: homework?

126 replies

ThisMustBeMyDream · 23/05/2021 18:24

I have just composed the following email to my son's teachers. We are overwhelmed at home, and at breaking point. I have 2 young children in yr 3 and yr1. My yr3 son has Autism and ADHD. I am a single parent. They don't see their father. My boyfriend is a FT teacher with his own child and doesn't live with me - so no room to help there. My Mum lives 80 miles away, so no support there either. I'm an only child, so no other family support. So basically I'm doing all this myself as well as working as a midwife.

Do you think this email comes across as aggressive, or offensive? I've run it past my boyfriend (yr 2 teacher) and mum (recently retired primary head and current ofsted inspector) who have both told me to get it sent. But I'm an anxious mess right now as I'm very much a person who has to do the right thing, follow the rules etc. but this time, my son needs me to stand up for him. And I need to create a better balance at home for us. I don't want my son to suffer though by not doing the work. So I feel like I can't win 🤷‍♀️.

"As a family, we are struggling with the amount of homework/spellings/reading that there is to complete due to how long the process takes with X, and also having a sibling needing to complete a similar level of work too. Previous conversations we have had you have told me that X is able to do this work independently. This has not been the case. X's rigidity and fixed thinking (due to his Autism) means he struggles to do what he perceives as work outside of the "work environment" ie. school. This is why homeschooling was so incredibly difficult. A 30 minute meltdown on average at having to do homework at weekends (this has been the case throughout his education) is not him being able to work independently. Once he actually sits down to do it, it still involves me keeping him on track, constant reminders, keeping him focused etc. If I allow him to complete the work "independently" then he is not reading it, and doing what he thinks he should. Therefore he learns nothing from the exercise. As such I am questioning what point there is in doing homework for him. It feels like a box tick exercise rather than a learning opportunity. I want X to enjoy learning as he does at school.

With spellings, X can't sit on an ipad quietly and just get on with them. Perhaps he can in school, but again at home he is distracted by his environment. It is just not the same as school, and never can be. It is no easier getting him to write them out. It results in the same level of protest and meltdown as he is so fixed in his way of thinking. Reward charts and other means of bribery are not helpful at home either.

We already struggle to fit reading and spellings in as Monday, Tuesday and Thursday (my most common shift pattern) we only get home at 5.15-5.30. This leaves 1 hour 30 to make dinner, eat, read with both children, try and do spellings, his sibling has numbots to do also , have a bedtime story, try and fit baths in at some point etc. Both children are tired and ready for bed at 7, with lights out at 7.30 after stories. They get very little down time to spend as a family which is important for children.

Going forward, we will be prioritising reading as this is the key to all learning and something X needs lots of support with to make progress. We will not be completing homework unless X will do so of his own volition as this is not something that is benefiting him currently. I will review this as X gets older.

I hope you can understand my reasons for this. I believe children need a balance of work and rest/fun. At present, particularly for X, the balance is tipped greatly towards work. I want to give him a better balance and reduce the amount of meltdowns we are having and have a happier child.

If it is possible to facilitate doing homework or spellings in after school provision then this of course would be welcomed especially if X is less resistant in the school environment."

Please help. I want to send this tomorrow morning.

OP posts:
MarshaBradyo · 23/05/2021 18:51

Your suggestion of a solution is a good one so I’d get to that faster.

It may be overlooked with all the bedtime etc detail

Pinkblueberry · 23/05/2021 18:53

I think it would be better to arrange a phone call with the teacher tbh. I understand you want to be clear in your email but there’s a lot of info there that perhaps isn’t actually needed and the teacher then still needs to reply. You can simply say on the phone we are really struggling with getting homework done, there isn’t enough time and it’s causing serious stress - and then the teacher may have suggestions on how to reduce/ prioritise.

Fitforforty · 23/05/2021 18:54

The sentiment is fine but it needs to be much shorter with just the key points. The first 3 paragraphs can be shortened to ‘At the moment I’m struggling to get Jack to complete homework at home. As a result of his autism he believes school work should only be completed in school and homework at home is leading to meltdowns.

Then you could say something like;

From now on at home I will be prioritising reading. Is there any possibility of completing spellings or homework at school homework club or similar?

I am available to discuss this further on telephone number xxxxxxxx.

Kind Regards
Mum

Viciouslybashed · 23/05/2021 18:55

I'm fairly certain reading will be enough for the school. School cannot win re homework some parents want loads some find it all too much.

saraclara · 23/05/2021 18:55

@TeenMinusTests

Viciously No. I am suggesting that at some schools it might be possible for 1 child with SEN to be allowed to enter early and sit quietly in a classroom doing their spellings whilst the teacher/TA set up around them. It is a potential reasonable adjustment. They can always say no it isn't possible, but as a parent of a child with SEN, if you don't ask you don't get.
You can ask, but it's highly unlikely that it would be possible. There'll be insurance issues, and supervision would be almost impossible, as setting up involves leaving the classroom to fetch things from other areas of the school and discussing things with other staff, (which could be in other rooms or might be confidential).

A complete no-no at every school I've ever worked at. Not because we set out to be difficult, but because it just isn't practical.

PicaK · 23/05/2021 18:57

I put yabu because I think this is too long.
It needs to be a conversation in a meeting.

Dear Teacher Name,
Had an awful, awful weekend with homework. Current state of play is not wiring for us.
Please can we have a meeting to discuss?
Good times for me this week are x, y, z etc
Cheers

toocold54 · 23/05/2021 18:58

Definitely send an email (or set up a meeting and talk in person if you can) but that is too long and too much detail and your point may get lost.
You don’t need to say about timings or your boyfriend or his job or about his kids etc. Just keep it simple about your DS, how he is struggling and he is getting overwhelmed because of the homework etc.

PicaK · 23/05/2021 18:59

Working not wiring sorry
These conversations need the human touch.

ThisMustBeMyDream · 23/05/2021 18:59

@toocold54 I haven't mentioned about my boyfriend or his child in the email.

OP posts:
ThisMustBeMyDream · 23/05/2021 19:00

The reason for the email and the length is because I am not being listened to. I also have the overwhelming urge to justify why it is all too much. I suspect it is the attitude of his teachers (one more than the other tbh!) that is driving my need to explain. Sad

OP posts:
newnortherner111 · 23/05/2021 19:01

I think it needs to be shorter and followed up in a conversation. Phone call probably. I assume your DS has a formal diagnosis which the school is aware of.

RhubarbCustardy · 23/05/2021 19:01

It's way too detailed. I'd simply say that whilst you understand x manages to complete work at school that at home it's a different picture and it's a struggle to get him to complete the tasks without a meltdown. I'd put the idea of you concentrating on reading as a suggestion to them rather than telling them this what you have decided. Put it as if you want to work with the teacher (because you really need them to be onside for this to work out OK) Keep it simple. Start the email afresh. I hope you get it sorted. The teacher might be glad of the chance to discuss it with you.

newnortherner111 · 23/05/2021 19:02

Cross post- if you are not being listened to my your DS teacher, then perhaps it should be to the Head or SENCO.

dapsnotplimsolls · 23/05/2021 19:02

I agree with others that it's too long and the 'We will not be doing homework' comes across in a bit of a harsh way. Is there an after-school club?

Bluntness100 · 23/05/2021 19:04

I also think it’s too long and detailed.

Just say we are finding it tough due to x medical issues as such we need to focus purely on reading going forward, happy to discuss further.

Viciouslybashed · 23/05/2021 19:04

@ThisMustBeMyDream

The reason for the email and the length is because I am not being listened to. I also have the overwhelming urge to justify why it is all too much. I suspect it is the attitude of his teachers (one more than the other tbh!) that is driving my need to explain. Sad
I am sorry you feel that you are not listened to, I still think you need to not include so much detail. Tell them simply you are not managing with the excessive demands. It will be ok.
Pinkblueberry · 23/05/2021 19:04

@ThisMustBeMyDream just seen your update re having issues with the teachers. Have you spoken to the head or another SLT about this? It seems odd that the teacher and SENCOs aren’t on the same page, has that been addressed?

TeenMinusTests · 23/05/2021 19:05

The more detail you put in about home routine, the more you leave yourself open to them trying to 'fix' your routine, when ultimately it is the autism & meltdowns that are the cause.
So leave it all out. State your decision, make your suggestions for adaptations, but don't open things for discussion when they aren't open.

Mum233 · 23/05/2021 19:05

I am with you here. I’m a Primary Teacher (although recently left due to becoming disillusioned with ‘the system’ and now living my dream of being a tutor for SEN children) and we don’t always do the homework in our house (one child in reception and one in year 1) The school have been piling on the homework and my kids need down time. Homework shouldn’t be another stress to add on to an already busy week.
X

toocold54 · 23/05/2021 19:06

@ThisMustBeMyDream sorry I re-read and saw that that was written before ‘the email’. I definitely think it is too long as even when I was reading your OP the actual point wasn’t clear.
I definitely understand why you’re trying to explain everything but I think a short email with a request for a phone call or meeting in person so you can explain why he is unable to do his homework if they think it’s an issue.

ThisMustBeMyDream · 23/05/2021 19:06

Can't ever be put through to the head. It is always redirected. I've tried to send emails in the past - they just get sent to a teacher or someone else to deal with. Phone calls yield the same result.
The senco who is my yr1 son's teacher started mat leave on Friday. No announcement for who has taken over, but given it was my yr 3 son's teacher who took over for her last mat leave... one would suspect she is doing so this time. So.... brick wall there! The senco is amazing. I really should have done this before she went off. Foolish really.

OP posts:
LondonerRandomName · 23/05/2021 19:07

Have a year 3 DS with ASD. No homework at home. He outright refuses as home is home and not a place to study (strict way of thinking for him). Also after a day at school trying to conform to the "normal" way, he let's go at home. School know this and there is no pressure or demand from them as to homework.

CassandraTrotter · 23/05/2021 19:09

Cut that email right down. First paragraph end at that’s why home learning during lockdown was so difficult. And then go straight to the final paragraph about moving forward.

ThisMustBeMyDream · 23/05/2021 19:09

@TeenMinusTests yes, you're right. I don't want them to try and fix it. I know what we need to do to fix it ourselves. They are likely to see it as a challenge that needs fixing. Good point.

OP posts:
Atalune · 23/05/2021 19:09

They won’t read all that detail and your points will be lost. There is too much unnecessary detail.

Like I say at primary school homework is not compulsory anyways so you don’t need to explain anything.

I’d send a much shorter email and copy the head in. If they still don’t listen you can escalate to the school governors.

But keep it shorted. fitforforty up thread supplied a good example.

Good luck. Flowers

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