Every few days, I'll get a recorded call from Michael, saying that it's my last chance to renew my vehicle warranty. I wonder what will happen if Michael ever calls one of those Pakistani scammers who pose as IRS agents.Those freaking robotic telemarketer calls have gotten so annoying now that voice recognition has gotten more ubiquitous.
There is no wrong Kardashian.
I just spent 2 fucking hours trying to get the header to show right and when I did I didn't like it so I scrapped it. Right now the site is WAY too busy and just...terrible.You probably just need more glittery animated gifs.
Does this site have scripted functionality (CMS, shopping cart, blogging platform, ...) or is it a static site that gets manually edited and re-uploaded? If the latter, you could try finding a free Boostrap template and add your content to it. It takes a lot of headaches out of the equation, in my experience, and there's a ton of tutorials that cover all the bases.I just spent 2 fucking hours trying to get the header to show right and when I did I didn't like it so I scrapped it. Right now the site is WAY too busy and just...terrible.
I don't know if this would help at all, but a friend of mine home schools her kids in CO, although they are much younger, but she does it through a neighborhood community, so it isn't just her kids. If you don't think you could teach him the way he needs, is there a home schooling group he might fit in with? Maybe the smaller group will help his focus more, or at least get more one-on-one attention.I am so fed up with public school right now, not with teachers, but with the system in general. I am strongly considering trying online high school with my son and just teaching him my damn self instead of having to drag him out of bed and practically dress him myself just to have him come home and have him stare blankly at homework that he doesn't want to do. I'm concerned about social engagement and IEP services if I go that way, but quite frankly he's not interacting with kids at school NOW, and his services are considered an elective that he gets a fucking grade for (and not even a gimme grade, he got a fucking C last semester). I have to kick and scream to get a para for check in because they can't spare them for Honors/AP classes, but even then my son is a disorganized mess and if things he needs aren't available on Schoology they might as well not exist. He failed a class because I didn't know he was missing his lab work (which never showed up online and his teacher never communicated this with me until 4 0s showed up at zero hour) I wish I could put him in private school, but the best fit for him is 35k or so a year which it's not going to happen no matter how many fights I have with my husband about it. He was doing well for the first part of the year, but ever since Thanksgiving break he's regressed back months, to the point where I can't trust him to do anything on his own initiative anymore and he's punishing himself for not doing things as soon as I ask him to do it. The most frustrating thing is if I try to ask him what's wrong, he says he doesn't know, so I don't know what to do to help. I don't think the classes are too hard for him, and honestly he doesn't get a lot of homework, most of the time it's 90 minutes tops for everything if he just did it. His focus is just completely gone. I know online high school still goes at the same basic pace, but I don't think I could teach him at his level after many years out of school combined with knowledge atrophy.
On top of that I'm seriously starting to wonder if my daughter has high functioning autism, but it's so hard to tell in girls. I see a lot of myself in her, but I could never put a finger on a lot of things I struggled with until I had my son.
I won't even go into the fear I have about the future of the public education system in general in the next four years.
From someone who's tried both online high school and online college: If your son cannot self motivate, he will fail in an online school. Period. Even if you watch him like a hawk.I am so fed up with public school right now, not with teachers, but with the system in general. I am strongly considering trying online high school with my son and just teaching him my damn self instead of having to drag him out of bed and practically dress him myself just to have him come home and have him stare blankly at homework that he doesn't want to do. I'm concerned about social engagement and IEP services if I go that way, but quite frankly he's not interacting with kids at school NOW, and his services are considered an elective that he gets a fucking grade for (and not even a gimme grade, he got a fucking C last semester). I have to kick and scream to get a para for check in because they can't spare them for Honors/AP classes, but even then my son is a disorganized mess and if things he needs aren't available on Schoology they might as well not exist. He failed a class because I didn't know he was missing his lab work (which never showed up online and his teacher never communicated this with me until 4 0s showed up at zero hour) I wish I could put him in private school, but the best fit for him is 35k or so a year which it's not going to happen no matter how many fights I have with my husband about it. He was doing well for the first part of the year, but ever since Thanksgiving break he's regressed back months, to the point where I can't trust him to do anything on his own initiative anymore and he's punishing himself for not doing things as soon as I ask him to do it. The most frustrating thing is if I try to ask him what's wrong, he says he doesn't know, so I don't know what to do to help. I don't think the classes are too hard for him, and honestly he doesn't get a lot of homework, most of the time it's 90 minutes tops for everything if he just did it. His focus is just completely gone. I know online high school still goes at the same basic pace, but I don't think I could teach him at his level after many years out of school combined with knowledge atrophy.
On top of that I'm seriously starting to wonder if my daughter has high functioning autism, but it's so hard to tell in girls. I see a lot of myself in her, but I could never put a finger on a lot of things I struggled with until I had my son.
I won't even go into the fear I have about the future of the public education system in general in the next four years.
It's pretty easy to say file suit, but realistically it won't really do anything. Special Ed across the country isn't meeting funding requirements, and spending on education in CO in general is complete crap. You'll find most special ed in schools (not all, but a significant number) will be fine for kids who are able to basically function normally, or kids who aren't really expected to be part of the general ed curriculum. But if you have a kid who likes learning but struggles with executive functioning, your options are put them in classes that are too easy but they'll get extra help, or put them in the class that fits their education level and make them work it out. The reason online school was something I was considering was because flat out, at least if he does online school I'll be there to help him one on one. But it's still not really ideal. I don't really have the temperament for teaching him myself, because while my attention span is better than his, there's really no mystery where a lot of his tendencies came from in his gene pool. I'm mostly just frustrated and venting once again that the best option is prohibitively expensive and my husband is more worried about us being tapped out before our kids get to college while I'm more worried that college will never happen for my son because everything in school is a band aid instead of actual help.From someone who's tried both online high school and online college: If your son cannot self motivate, he will fail in an online school. Period. Even if you watch him like a hawk.
As for the rest of it... honestly? Look into filing suit with the school.
With some children the interface actually matters. My son wouldn't be doing his homework if he couldn't do it on the computer, and work with the teachers to turn some assignments into computer assignments, such as a PowerPoint rather than a report.From someone who's tried both online high school and online college: If your son cannot self motivate, he will fail in an online school. Period.
This is a fair point. I never would have succeeded in school if I hadn't been allowed to turn in typed reports instead of hand written ones. Sometimes being able to do stuff like this can be a game changer.With some children the interface actually matters. My son wouldn't be doing his homework if he couldn't do it on the computer, and work with the teachers to turn some assignments into computer assignments, such as a PowerPoint rather than a report.
So there are some situations where self motivation is different based on the interface.
And that's kind of my point. Would he be more inclined to do his work if he could do it from home instead of having to get up at 5:30 in the morning to catch the bus at 6:30 to have to sit still in a classroom all day? I don't know the answer. That's why it's only a thought ticking the back of my mind and not my actual plan.I agree with you on both counts. Sometimes the method affects the motivation, and self motivation is required to succeed in education.
Therefore changing the method can sometimes affect self motivation, but it's certainly no guarantee.