To me it sounds like he put in the bare minimum effort and did not make a good faith attempt. I could be wrong though but it’s a fair guess.
The teacher could add criteria to force him to work harder, but he’s probably going to cheese that too. Can’t force him to engage. Have you never met one of those people that will work hard to strictly do the bare minimum?
I see your point, but to me, that once again signifies the ineptness of the teacher to deal with special needs students. In the case you’re describing it’s just different kind of special needs.
Mind you, it’s kids we’re talking about. Without guidance, they’ll be doing what they do.
Sure, the influence can be limited, but straight up blaming kids for things like that is, at best, unprofessional. You’re at least supposed to try working with them on the issue.
I’m still not sure why you flagged this as special needs. From the information given this is a normal kid behaving mediocre. Did I miss something? There’s nothing exceptional about doing the work fast, presumably because he did the bare minimum.
I interpreted the ‘lazy’ comment directed at his behaviour not his character. I’m sure they have been working on the issue for a long time. There’s tonnes of people out there, confidently underperforming, unmotivated to meet their potential.
I’m just saying it takes two to teach. Students have a responsibility too.
To me, special needs aren’t about being exceptional or not. Read carefully, as I did account for “normal kid behaving mediocre” in my last comment. Think, “It’s a behavior that requires a different strategy from normal.” Hence “special” needs.
Sure, there are tons of unmotivated people. Sure, it’s not everybody you can motivate. But the responsibility lies with the teacher first, not the student.
It’s their job to find the approach to such students. I think it’s unfair to judge a kid’s behaviour without looking at the adults around them first.
To me it sounds like he put in the bare minimum effort and did not make a good faith attempt. I could be wrong though but it’s a fair guess.
The teacher could add criteria to force him to work harder, but he’s probably going to cheese that too. Can’t force him to engage. Have you never met one of those people that will work hard to strictly do the bare minimum?
I see your point, but to me, that once again signifies the ineptness of the teacher to deal with special needs students. In the case you’re describing it’s just different kind of special needs.
Mind you, it’s kids we’re talking about. Without guidance, they’ll be doing what they do.
Sure, the influence can be limited, but straight up blaming kids for things like that is, at best, unprofessional. You’re at least supposed to try working with them on the issue.
I’m still not sure why you flagged this as special needs. From the information given this is a normal kid behaving mediocre. Did I miss something? There’s nothing exceptional about doing the work fast, presumably because he did the bare minimum. I interpreted the ‘lazy’ comment directed at his behaviour not his character. I’m sure they have been working on the issue for a long time. There’s tonnes of people out there, confidently underperforming, unmotivated to meet their potential.
I’m just saying it takes two to teach. Students have a responsibility too.
To me, special needs aren’t about being exceptional or not. Read carefully, as I did account for “normal kid behaving mediocre” in my last comment. Think, “It’s a behavior that requires a different strategy from normal.” Hence “special” needs.
Sure, there are tons of unmotivated people. Sure, it’s not everybody you can motivate. But the responsibility lies with the teacher first, not the student.
It’s their job to find the approach to such students. I think it’s unfair to judge a kid’s behaviour without looking at the adults around them first.