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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:
GrasswillbeGreener · 23/05/2021 20:08

My daughter, who wasn't diagnosed ASD till her teens, told me once that one of the things she liked about boarding school was that it meant school was for school and home was for other things. She did have to study in the holidays once she got to exam years but by that stage she could adapt better.

My impression is that most younger children thrive best on clear routine, and ASD kids even more so. So your approach sounds exactly right, to focus on what is important and what is achievable, and leave the rest.

I agree with others that if you can take your email as a first draft and cut it down a bit, your message will be clearer. Good luck. And I hope your son gets back to having an understanding teacher next year.

GrasswillbeGreener · 23/05/2021 20:09

(sorry meant to clarify, my daughter boarded from yr 5 at a choirschool, her choice! not meaning to imply ASD children should be sent away)

Hankunamatata · 23/05/2021 20:09

You would be better asking for a phonecall from each teacher and the senco

aquashiv · 23/05/2021 20:13

Just call them and explain.. they'll understand. Many parents complain because they don't get enough homework.
Keeping him motivated to learn is enough..

kittymamma · 23/05/2021 20:15

If I received this email on a Monday morning, I probably wouldn't read it. I just wouldn't have time, then it would end up in my inbox, marked as read, and forgotten about.

A much shorter email is needed, straight to the point. I think it is a valid suggestion that the child does the homework in after school club. I would suggest saving all that explanation and finishing with "if you would like to discuss further how I have come to my conclusion that this is the best way forward, please let me know". I know no teacher who will take you up on that offer.

When my daughter was that young I had a similar conversation with her teacher because when you get home at 5 pm, make tea, sit down to eat before you know, it's wind-down time and bedtime, there is no time for spellings.

Flowersandjellybeans · 23/05/2021 20:15

Even if no SEN, I think it’s beyond ridiculous to give children of this age homework!

We certainly didn’t have homework, apart from reading, when I was in primary school - and we still all managed to leave literate and numerate!

BrutusMcDogface · 23/05/2021 20:18

Far too long. I didn’t even read it all and teachers are busy people so a much shorter version would be better.

You have a point, though, and as a teacher and mum I actually hate most homework (except reading).

Hope they understand; they should.

Scratchpostkitty · 23/05/2021 20:22

I think HW at this age is optional or it should be. Reading and times tables in primary would be more worthwhile. I think it puts too much pressure on parents and children. I look after primary age children and I am solely responsible for ensuring homework gets done (parents don't do it at all) . We basically do what we can. As I'm part time and they're at clubs a lot, I just ignore a lot of it. Nothing has ever been said.
I think you need to be a little more consise with your email as others have pointed out, but I think no teacher would have a problem with it.

PuffinBadger · 23/05/2021 20:23

We just did any homework on a Sunday apart from reading as they had a week to do it. It sounds like your ds is only being given a day to do daily tasks though, so worth pointing out but I'd try and get it into one paragraph if you can get it in a nutshell. Ours only had daily hwk expected in the next day by year 6 I think

Lulola · 23/05/2021 20:24

I’m a teacher and think it sounds perfect, except I would start with something mentioning you have had previous discussions about it to show you’ve tried. It clearly explains the issue, I would email the teacher but also copy in the headteacher. If you don’t have the headteachers email could you copy in the schools “info” email or whatever they have but address it to class and head teacher?

Angelica789 · 23/05/2021 20:24

I’d just say that due to the issues caused by his ASD it’s not possible for you to do homework with him at the moment. You know he works well at school but he refuses to engage at home. You will have a break and try again in the future. I’d think any decent teacher would accept that.

WhereTheWildlingsLive · 23/05/2021 20:25

I voted yabu purely for the length! Not unreasonable to not do the homework, as (many) pp have pointed out it's not compulsory at primary so don't stress yourself! I have two kids with undiagnosed ADD/ADHD at home and they definitely haven't fallen far from the tree Grin and we basically consider anything beyond to and from school a bonus! Can't stand this bloody homework stress for this age anyway, they are kids, buggared if I'm going to turn us all into sobbing grey messes for extra spellings! 🙄

Wait till secondary to get stressed about homework.

Greenmarmalade · 23/05/2021 20:32

It’s very good and you are totally right to send it.

I’m a teacher and would be very appreciate to receive it. I’d follow it up with a phone call and we’d agree on a way forward that worked for you and your child.

In future, please rest assured that you’re completely justified to have the same conversations before starting secondary school, so that your child isn’t overwhelmed.

Greenmarmalade · 23/05/2021 20:33

I think the length is fine- you should feel free to fully express yourself. Teachers can read a long letter!

Wanttocryatthecost · 23/05/2021 20:34

I havnt read the whole thread but from what I’ve read definitely send it.

I did something similar to the HT, DCs were yr1 and yr3. There has been studies that have proven additional homework dose not benefit a child’s education. The school even sent one to us as parents while still asking for homework. I made it clear unless the homework was fun, something we could do as a family and my DCs wanted to do it that we would no longer be cutting into our family time and creating unnecessary stress and anxiety trying to manage homework from school. I said we will read as we would normally and do spellings once a week. Anything else was not a priority.

There is nothing they could say to this.

MoiraRose4 · 23/05/2021 20:37

Another one who thinks it’s too long and will not have the reaction you want. I can imagine it getting backs up and eyes rolling with the level of detail.

I would email and request a face to face meeting regarding the difficulties your experiencing. The headteacher should have an email address that you can direct it to if you’re meeting a brick wall with the teacher. State clearly all previous occasions you’ve raised it. Be firm that you want it escalating to SLT if not dealt with. Your next step is to complain to governors.

nanbread · 23/05/2021 20:40

@TeenMinusTests

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.
Agree 100% with this.

The bottom line is, due to your son's needs, he is unable to complete his homework.

Harsh as it sounds it's not their problem that you're a working single mum, that you have a lot to juggle, that you put them to bed at x oclock etc.

But HIS needs and how they impact his ability to work ARE their problem, to an extent.

I would focus on those.

Also homework is not compulsory at primary age and children cannot be punished for not doing it.

If you aren't getting anywhere after this, please email the head and cc in the head of governors.

I'd also ask in your email who the new SENCO is.

GU24Mum · 23/05/2021 20:42

Definitely far too long and a teacher could take it as a criticism which you're probably not intending.

Was going to suggest something but the draft from sparemonitor is exactly what I'd have written.

Pinkblueberry · 23/05/2021 20:42

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.

I would definitely leave this out and stick with the point that dealing with the melt downs is causing too much stress. Teachers also have children and presumably don’t get home until 5.30 or 6.00. It won’t support your point.

thecatwithnoeyes · 23/05/2021 20:48

I wouldn't send that. It's huge and full of irrelevant information. School have no interest in the bed/bath stuff for example.

Mine never did homework in primary school. It was not an issue. School understand their needs and this isn't something I ever had to contact them about. If you feel you must, drop a quick email or phone call, but what you have written is way OTT for what essentially should even need said.

mowwiththebow · 23/05/2021 20:48

Agree with pp who said to send a paragraph. If going really short doesn't work for you, I would re order and focus on these points:

"I'm writing to let you know that X cannot complete the volume of homework he is getting and we will therefore be focusing on reading for the rest of the term.

In previous conversations you felt that X would be able to do his homework independently. While this may be true when he is in the school environment, it is unfortunately not the case at home where we are having frequent meltdowns and someone needs to sit with him. Reward charts and other incentives are not helpful and trying to do everything is having an extremely negative effect on X and our family.

Going forward, we will be prioritising reading as this is something X needs lots of support with and will impact his other learning. We will not be completing other homework unless X will do so of his own volition.

I hope you can understand my reasons for this. If it is possible to facilitate doing homework or spellings in after school provision then this of course would be very much welcomed especially if X is less resistant in the school environment."

JBaez · 23/05/2021 20:54

@saraclara

Due to X's autism and rigidity of thinking, he has regular meltdowns when tasked with doing what he perceives as schoolwork at home. This has sadly become unsustainable for us as a family to cope with and we have reluctantly decided we need to stop pressurising him to do homework' ...other than reading.

Yep, something like that. Maybe follow it with "I will obviously revisit this when we have reached a period of stability at home"

Send this.

Your e-mail is too long OP, too much detail.

Darkstar4855 · 23/05/2021 20:54

I would cut it a bit shorter and take out all the single mum/timings/sibling stuff. Just stick to the point that your son is struggling with homework outside school environment due to his autism/meltdowns, you feel the best thing would be to reduce the amount he does for the time being and you will look at after school club to see if it might help.

Teach234 · 23/05/2021 21:03

It's far to long op I say this as a teacher. You don't need that much detail about your bed time routine particularly. We haven't got time to read all that.

starfishmummy · 23/05/2021 21:03

Too long and rambling.

I would state something along the lines of

X is unable to complete his homework; because of his SN he will not work independently in the home environment and attempts to do so result in meltdowns.

You could go on to say that you would like to concentrate on reading at home and ask for their suggeztions regarding his spellings. You could perhaos ask whether he can do these at his after school club.

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