Message to all educators....

If there's a student (child or adult) who is often late attending their classes, or getting to school...

Please don't tell them off and punish or ridicule them as a knee-jerk reaction.

Dig deeper

The fact that they've turned up at all will usually be a strong indication that they've tried very hard to get there.

They could have difficulties with:

- Some of their executive functions (organising, planning, time management, prioritisating, working memory)
- Anxiety about certain aspects of attending school/college/uni (bullying, social interaction with students/teachers who don't understand their communication differences, differences in learning styles)
- Difficulties at home
- Poor sleep
- Difficulties with home environment
- Poverty

Please be curious, gentle and explore their reasons why they're late and work with them.

We often don't see the immense effort the person, and their families go through, just to get them there 5 or 10 minutes late.

To sum up....

Be kind, aporoachable and non-judgemental....both to the student and their caregivers.

To paraphrase Dr Ross Greene,

A person does well if they can.
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#OccupationalTherapy
#Teachers
#SEND
#Education
#School
#Autistic
#ADHD
#Dyspraxia
#Dyslexia
#Neurodivergent
#Poverty
#HumanRights
#ReasonableAdjustments
#Disability
#DisabilityRights

@OT_Expert I wish mandatory attendance wasn't a thing. Lectures drain my spoons so hard I literally force myself to wake up and get there with tragic consequences to my health. To the point I almost faint and dye my exam papers or notebooks with blood.

There's no way to take a break because attendance lower than 50% in my facility (even if excused) means you're getting expelled.

Of course nobody fucking cares about the wellbeing of students, they only want good grades, perfect attendance and health.

Education in its current state is a slaughterhouse for many.

@sozou I'm so sorry to hear that ❤️ the education system here, in the US and probably many other countries is failing so many neurodivergent and disabled students