Don't sign him onto the special needs registerThank you all who have commented so far, I felt alone in my views, your help has given me confidence.
Thank You, and best wishes.
Sorry i cannot understand why you dont want extra care for your son whilst at school, what to you think will happen if you sign him as special needs?
My son was special needs at school, when he did his GCSEs he was top of whole school with A*s. He then went to do his A levels at grammar school coming out with A*s. He went on to university, got a 2/1 Bsc. He is now a fully qualified airline pilot. There isn't a stigma, it is help where it is needed and if thst
Many years ago I was a school governor and still have some vague memories of "Special Needs". Things could, of course, have changed, but please don't interpret "special needs" as "a bit thick" or "mentally not quite up to it" or "unable to cope", it is, as it says, a special need. Your son does need some special awareness by staff and might have a need beyond, above or different to other children in certain circumstances. See it as being like allergic to nuts, just something that needs to be noted, not a form of discrimination or negative labelling. My understanding was that, especially in infant and junior schools, large numbers of children are "special needs" at some point. It's a very broad brush and is often temporary. In my own family, a then young relative was put on the special needs register for some troubled behaviour. She went on to a top university and may now be the doctor who is treating you. Yes, there is some additional funding for Special Needs, but that's how life works these days and, maybe some teacher will be sent on a course to understand T1 better.
Do ask questions, but don't think of it as a stigma or imagine that your son will have to wear a big badge to single him out.
Sally
He already has that without the special needs register thoughYou might want to read this from the Children with Diabetes group http://www.childrenwithdiabetes.com/uk/AccessingSupportForChildrenWithDiabetesInSchool-UK.pdf
It is kind of seems like the teachers are too lazy to manage his diabetes and are trying to get out of it. Though I am not exactly sure how the special needs register works
As mentioned earlier in the thread, would you want a child with an inhaler to be signed onto the special needs register. Also we don't know if ops school has a teaching assistant and that'd be a good question to askIf you don't know how it works, then telling someone not to sign up to it, isn't very good information.
Teacher may have a class of 20/30+ children, if a diabetic child has a hypo the teacher has one child in need and another 19/29 without a teacher.
My son's class mates were fairly unaware he had his own teaching assistant as the assistant helped out anyone in the class that needed assurance etc, the teacher got on with teaching the whole class.
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