My son was injured at school in march sustaining a head injury which required a ct scan at the hospital and on going treatment up to date,during this time he had to miss school for nearly three weeks and quite an amount of work as he was doing his A levels,when he went back to school obviously the teachers were collecting the work from the previous weeks which he did not have. To cut a long story short we had to go to a meeting and were told that because he had not handed the work in and had fallen behind he could not do his A levels as it was possible he would not make the grades and that would not be good for the school? so he would be better off leaving.
what should i do?.
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That's disgusting, Melanie. If nothing else this could well be in breach of disability discrimination legislation. I would not hesitate to involve a solicitor - you could call the Elfrida Rathbone centre in Camden (020 7424 1601) as they are specialists in this area and could perhaps advise.
I'm afraid this is the way schools choose to manipulate their league table position, with little regard for the individual - I have heard similar stories before.
Three weeks is only 10% of the school year. If he was up to date with his work up to that point, it should be possible to catch up. If they knew he was off school for bona fide reasons, did they send the work home meanwhile? It's a pretty weak set of lessons if it can't allow for someone doing a few sessions from home - even if those bits of the course turn out to be a fail, the work from the rest of the year should be enough to pass overall.
It may be better not to get into a big fight at this point, but to ask nicely if your son can just come back to school and see what he can do, exams start very soon. If he is withdrawn form the course, it still looks bad on the school record, so their wretched league table would still suffer.
Are you sure his work before the accident was OK?
I meant it will look bad on the school record, not your son's. Percentage success is measured by passing the course times completing the course. So taking people who are going to fail off the course, shows up in the results. Otherwise if one person passes and ninety nine are removed before the end, that's 100% success rate.
I have half my class (in F.E.) about to fail their course, I am being encouraged to get them off the register before the course ends but it will still show up in our results and therefore our OFSTED grade, as a fail.
Reggie is right, Melanie, they simply can't do this. Even a private school has a duty of care to their pupils, and proper procedures should be followed - written warnings etc. They can't just tell your son to go away.
I think the time before the exams is now too short for dealing with this politely, and they seem to be ignoring you anyway. You need to move fast.
Reggie thank you so much for your reply it is actually a state school not in this borough though,
i have sent you a request so maybe we can have a chat.
Thank you.
Hi there Melanie
I don't have a straight answer but it sounds wrong definitely
if you need specialist advice about this, try looking on the Advisory Centre for education's website and/or call their helpline:
General advice line:
0808 800 5793
Exclusion advice line:
0808 800 0327
Exclusion information line:
020 7704 9822 (24hr answer phone)
they have information sheets on their website as well and are ery good at what they do- free, impartial advice to parents and advisors about educational matters...
hope they can help
take care
Suzi
Thank you so much.
i am a secondary school teacher of 30 years i am appalled!!
he should have been given work to do during the time off and he could be given special consideration.
what are his target grades and was he reaching them before the accident?
the school have a responsibility to him and he should be entered for the exams and given every opportunity to be successful in the exams, if he hasnt completed coursework it may have some bearing on the grade as coursework grades need to be handed in before the exam season.
they have no right to withdraw him and at this stage it will cost the school to do so.
good luck
Another teacher here...
They've handled it badly. Perhaps it was appropriate that work was not sent home for him; if he were not well enough to attend school, he could be considered as not well enough to work at home. However, examination boards are considerate to extenuating circumstances (such as your son's) if informed.
Did he miss out on coursework? It seems like a very small window between setting and the teachers' (or teacher's) requirement to input grades, if this is the case. If there is no coursework missing, the school has even less justification for withdrawing your son. How was he doing grade-wise up to that point? I am suspecting that they might be looking for an excuse to 'lose' him if they didn't think he'd do well; the fact that they are not suggesting that he repeat the year at their school (as would be possible at my school) makes me think this... Either way, I would not be necessarily surprised about a private school doing this but AM shocked that your son's school is a state one! It seems surprisingly unsupportive and mercenary.
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