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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:
Clymene · 23/05/2021 19:11

Dear Mrs Teacher,

Jack is finding homework too challenging at the moment so we will focus on reading for the rest of this year.

I would be happy to come in and discuss realistic goals for Year 4.

Yours,

Dream.

PussInBin20 · 23/05/2021 19:13

You are not being unreasonable. I think at primary age there should just be some reading and maybe practice spellings/times tables at the weekend.

They are only this young once and whilst I appreciate homework for older children, my priority is my child’s happiness. Not stress and being anxious!

Luckily my DDs school encourages us to do various online HW as well as the above but there is no set work that has to be completed each week.

There just isn’t enough time and family time is important at weekends IMO.

BlackeyedSusan · 23/05/2021 19:15

Too long.

Short and sweet. Mentioning disability. Specifically mention disability. And reasonable adjustments.

Not that it did us much good. Though ds is not getting chased for homework in secondary school.

seven201 · 23/05/2021 19:25

It's too long. Just tell them from now on you're only doing the reading because of x, y, z. Don't talk about baths etc. You do not need to justify all of your reasons.

I'm a teacher.

Pinkblueberry · 23/05/2021 19:28

It’s disappointing to hear that the head doesn’t respond. I say that because, although I understand you’ve had issues with these teachers in the past, homework expectations will presumably be the same across the school. Most teachers would agree that it’s better to focus on reading - our school scrapped homework sheets last year and replaced it with reading, spellings and times table practice which has been great. That’s a whole school initiative though - not individual teachers. Even if the teachers agreed with you it’s tricky for them to just say ‘ok that’s fine, we agree you, you don’t need to’ because I guess they can’t make exceptions like that for their own class. Reduce homework maybe - agreeing to no homework at all needs to come from SLT. And before someone says ‘it’s not compulsory’ - in that case do away with the email all together, say nothing and just stop doing the homework. What can they do?

Soontobe60 · 23/05/2021 19:30

I’m a teacher and a SENCo.
Your letter, whilst clearly showing how much you’re finding the whole homework thing an issue, is very waffly. This is what I’d send:

Dear XXX
As my dc is becoming more challenging at home due to the pressures being placed on him to complete an unreasonable amount of homework, I have decided that for the remaining Summer term we will focus on improving his reading skills only. If you are able to recommend a suitable online spelling programme that he can complete independently then I am happy for him to also do that.
We will review this situation when he enters year 4 in September.
Thank you for supporting me in this matter,
Regards,

RavingAnnie · 23/05/2021 19:31

Homework has no educational benefit until secondary school.

I had the same issues with my ADHD/ASC son and simply told the school that he won't be doing homework as it causes too much stress and I wasn't prepared to distress him as much as it did for no educational benefit. He wasn't diagnosed at this point (but obviously had tons of issues and difficulties they were aware of).

He already did tons of reading so that's the important bit at their age.

In secondary school, he ended up doing homework in school with an ASC TA 121 he had a couple of lessons a week.

He did very well in his GCSEs and now had a degree and a really good job. He's doing much better than I was at his age!! So the lack of homework in primary didn't hold him back lol!!

OurChristmasMiracle · 23/05/2021 19:32

I would actually email the teacher and say hi mrs x, I wanted to discuss with you child’s homework and whether there was any possibility of this being completed at after school club as child finds it difficult to concentrate at home as they are tired and suffer with ADHD and autism making learning outside of the classroom environment challenging.

Thank you for all of your effort and your time. Have a lovely weekend/evening/day

Child’s mum

Psychonabike · 23/05/2021 19:32

You sound exasperated @ThisMustBeMyDream.

I also have a child with ADHD. Homework just isn't a possibility. Medication wears off toward the end of the day and the amount of prompting that would be required would make every day such joyless hard work. People who arent in that position just don't understand and wonder why you wouldn't make that effort for their education and future, but It's really tough when it's more than just reluctance and it can utterly destroy the joy and trust in your relationship with your child.

When you have a child with SEN you become their advocate and you are the expert on your child. Keep this in mind and confidently let them know that:
-You and your child are going to take a break from homework
-It isn't working within your family life and routines
-The degree of prompting and supervision required is detrimental to family life.

You don't need all the extra detail and justification you've given.

Then let them set a date if they want to discuss this in a meeting, but be prepared to stand your ground. They don't have the right to intrude on your home-life and they don't know how things are at home. Every time they say that he can do it independently, just say "that's not the case at home". You could always just leave it entirely, just letting him know "this is the time you could use to do homework" and do no more at that point. That will demonstrate that he can't do it independently.

By the way, no homework is a well known "reasonable adjustment" for ADHD because of medication wearing off and the extra exhaustion experienced in trying to concentrate and follow routines all day. If they haven't considered this they might be at odds with the Disability Discrimination Act.

saraclara · 23/05/2021 19:36

@Soontobe60

I’m a teacher and a SENCo. Your letter, whilst clearly showing how much you’re finding the whole homework thing an issue, is very waffly. This is what I’d send:

Dear XXX
As my dc is becoming more challenging at home due to the pressures being placed on him to complete an unreasonable amount of homework, I have decided that for the remaining Summer term we will focus on improving his reading skills only. If you are able to recommend a suitable online spelling programme that he can complete independently then I am happy for him to also do that.
We will review this situation when he enters year 4 in September.
Thank you for supporting me in this matter,
Regards,

The unreasonable amount bit sounds like a criticism of the teacher. I absolutely wouldn't say that. The whole thing sounds a bit dictatorial, and some teachers respond really badly to that. I think I'm a really empathetic and reasonable teacher but that would even make me bristle every so slightly.
Awalkintime · 23/05/2021 19:39

I love how you've pointed out to the teacher you have things to do after school as a parent. Like she would have no idea that people do things like this after work!

Daphnise · 23/05/2021 19:40

Needs to be much shorter.

And less emotional.

StaffRepFeistyClub · 23/05/2021 19:41

Way way too long. Cut it right down as previous posters have said.

I am sorry but like this it will not be read in the way you want. It will be skim read and that’s it.

Whitchurch · 23/05/2021 19:41

You've already tried to deal with this and nothing has happened. So my advice is to download the school complaints procedure from the website and put it in there. Keep to facts and make sure you are clear about what outcome you want. The HT will then have to deal with you. If you're not satisfied after that (I'd say you need to see if their solutions work) then go to the next stage an escalate to governor involvement. That might be to the Chair of Governors or might be straight to a governor panel.

Whitchurch · 23/05/2021 19:42

Oh, and you might want to look at the homework policy, because it probably says something about reasonable workload. If you think they are breaching their own policy say that in your complaint.

MarshaBradyo · 23/05/2021 19:49

The whole thing sounds a bit dictatorial, and some teachers respond really badly to that. I think I'm a really empathetic and reasonable teacher but that would even make me bristle every so slightly.

The tone made me do the same and I’m not a teacher.

I think op sounds exasperated and it’s coming through. But a big edit will get better outcome.

fourminutestosavetheworld · 23/05/2021 19:49

I am a teacher and would not need that level of detail.

I have occasionally had parents of children with SEN tell me that homework is causing too much conflict and stress at home, and that they won't be doing anything except reading - not a problem.

By explaining your position you are exposing yourself to judgement, criticism and misguided attempts to help you organise a homework routine. You won't be the only single parent who has to cram homework in before bedtime, so don't mention it.

Clarkey86 · 23/05/2021 19:50

Sorry if I’ve missed you saying, but what’s the consequence of him not doing his homework? Because if there isn’t one, I’d just forget about it and not even bother. I say that as a Y2 teacher.

If they’re putting pressure on him and stressing him out or making him miss playtimes etc, I’d definitely be having a conversation but agree with others that short and to the point is better - they don’t need to know all the detail, just that you can’t physically do it and that’s that.

Marleymoo42 · 23/05/2021 19:50

It's far too long. I get these kind of emails all the time and putting so much effort into explaining every detail implies you are expecting it wont go down well. I would make it no longer than 3 sentences:

Due to Xs additional needs he is struggling to complete work outside school. I do not feel that he is benefitting from he work set and it is causing X and our family additional stress. I would really appreciate it if...

What youre asking is completely reasonable and I'm sure they will agree. I think you're over thinking it.

Sixsillysausagessizzlinginapan · 23/05/2021 19:50

You are not a teacher. You are not in a position to facilitate independent learning.
In face, I'd go as far as to say most teachers can't facilitate the learning of their own children, as the dynamic is completely different in a parent/child relationship than it is in a child/teacher relationship.
I would be far more clear and concise and tell them straight that you are unable to facilitate homework and it needs to be done in school.
A voluntary but paid homework club at school 3-4 would be great though, especially if delivered by actual teachers, and funds raised could go towards playground toys etc.

Sixsillysausagessizzlinginapan · 23/05/2021 19:51

Fact not face

Hankunamatata · 23/05/2021 19:54

Way too long.

AlmostSummer21 · 23/05/2021 20:04

I'm sorry you're having such a tough time.

Personally I would just do what you can (ie reading. Even if that's just you reading to him) and prioritise family life. With a child with SEN who sees things like 'school work at school/home life at home' and trying to do homework just ends up a battle/meltdowns, there is nothing to be gained (especially so young).

Let them get a froth on. If they do simply remind them DS has Autism and that you have explained that homework isn't ok for DS.

It's only a few weeks until the end of the year.

Hope you get better teachers again for him next year x

sparemonitor · 23/05/2021 20:05

I would go with

'Dear teacher,

We are really struggling with the homework at the moment - could I arrange a time to chat to you about it after half term, so we can work out a way forward?

yours etc'

this stuff is best said rather than emailed, your email is a bit long

WentworthPrison · 23/05/2021 20:07

As a teacher I find your email very defensive and passive aggressive. I'd be more than happy for you to knock homework on the head and prioritise reading but I can't lie and say I'd be thrilled at the tone of your email to be honest.

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