So, my DS is a star, I love him and his sis immensely.
However, he was born very early and has disabilities (hidden) and is autistic.
For years he was the kid who gets forgotten about by teachers. Had very few mates. When we did see or speak to teachers we almost had to remind them which one was him.
Predicted grades for GCSE outcomes from year 7 onwards were middle of the road, no more than 5 in anything.
Then lockdown happened. And online learning replaced classrooms.
For many kids, DD in fact, this was hard to transition to. For DS, well he's had years of being at home due to ill health. So he adapted pretty smoothly.
He thrived. When he was at his computer (his fave thing in the world) he was happy to show up online and answer questions. I was told by so many teachers how bright he was and they hadn't realised before (yes that annoyed me. I've always known he was smart).
Then, the confidence grew. So when he went back he decided he had enough of being in the mid groups for lessons, especially computing. He wrote the head an email asking to be put in a better attainment group. She forwarded it to teachers.
He was told to pop to one of the computer classrooms at lunch to do a test for computer science. He did the test....and some A'level work that happened to be sitting on the same file which he thought was part of the test.
It wasn't.
He was a second year. So A'level work is meant to be hard.
It wasn't.
So he went up 3 groups! And as even that was seen as not challenging he was given his own curriculum. He spent a day with Microsoft. He won two awards at the end of the next year.
He is now doing his GCSEs and we moved school for his last year at his request, we moved area but had said he could stay as it wasn't especially far. He didn't want to due to bullying and said all they saw was his SEN.
His new school doesn't see him as SEN. They see him as bright, mature, eloquent and resilient. He is predicted results of 7-9. The English literature curriculum had one different text- he learned it in a weekend. The English teacher had actually said to him not to worry and if he didn't do as well in lit and in language it didn't matter. At his mocks he got a 9 in literature, with most of it being set on that specific book, his teacher was shocked!
He is staying for A'level and has been allowed to pick 4. Old school suggested "trying" 2!
He has always been told by us that his disabilities don't mean anything and that with effort he can achieve whatever he wants. He has never used it as an excuse. In fact it drives him to prove to others he is just as good as neurotypical peers.