• rumba@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    The first problem is that we’re conflating Executive function with Knowledge.

    If you get a 50 because you didn’t understand the material, that’s different from not doing or turning in the work.

    I’m dealing with this now. The kid turns in his work, gets A’s and B’s, takes his test, and gets A’s. His actual work in school is all A’s, B’s and 0’s

    He’s learning, he knows the material. He can’t hold focus, loses the paper, gets embarrassed if it gets a wrinkle, doesn’t turn it in, and won’t keep an organized folder.

    He gets behind enough that he starts staying up late to finish the work and ends up falling asleep in class. We mediate with the teachers, stand over him to get him to do the work. Try to get him to keep it up once he’s out of our sight. We get back on even keel again 2 weeks later, and some teacher who’s behind on their grading does batch grading a week before the end of the semester, and we have 10 more assignments that weren’t listed in the portal the day before.

    Some of his teachers will take a late paper and give him a 50 on it. That’s a huge advantage because coming from a 0 is hard.

    And in before someone bitches at me that you can’t not turn in work in real live, yeah, I know what’s why we go to school and that’s why we’re working on it. Doctors, counselors, teachers, and parents.

    • The Picard Maneuver@piefed.worldOP
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      1 day ago

      Very true. I think there definitely needs to be a framework for accepting late work in these cases, which is much better than calling it 50% out of thin air.