Hi does anybody on here know the best way to handle my sons school. His 12 yrs old and type 1. Ever since starting secondry school they have been unhelpful to his needs. his attendence dropped due to them sending him home very time his levels risen to the extent that he had 50% by xmas. After having numerous meetings they finally got it that he needed to try and stay inif possible.
I have since received 2 letters in the past couple of days regarding his attendance. He enjoys school, yetit seems to be that they are not prepared to support him/us on this issue
Goodness me! I appreciate my son is much older (17) and only diagnosed at almost 16, but he has never been sent home from being too high, only when he was too low in the early days and struggling mentally to cope with it. How do the school know that he is 'too high' and how high is too high?
Has your son been diagnosed long? Is this all new since secondary school or did you have to deal with it at primary school level too?
My son won't even test at school so they wouldn't have a clue of his levels, but following a period of rebellion and changing of his regimes, it is not uncommon for him to be in the high teens when returning from school at the end of the day, but the school wouldn't have had a clue about this. If they did, and followed your son's school's lead, he probably wouldn't have been at school a single day this past term!
Maybe I am being naiive, but what is going to happen in the short term if he is on the high side? I would have thought they would be more inclined to send him home with persistent lows.
It really is unacceptable if it is the school making the decision against his and your wishes. They should stop interfering in my opinion! If he is feeling/appearing truly unwell, then it is a different matter.
Were the school given anything in writing following your son's diagnosis? If so, could they be following that to the letter and maybe taking it a bit too far? Is it maybe time you write (maybe with the assistance of your DSN) a new policy for the school to follow? As you have found out, they are soon on your back if the attendance isn't to their liking as it doesn't look good for their league table figures! Is there a nurse at your son's school? Mine has the modern day equivalent it seems, a first aider, but she is who deals with hypos and was a great point of contact in the early days, informing individual teachers, sorting out exam protocol etc. Might be worth seeing if you can find out who that is and speaking direct, and keep on at that one same person. The trouble with secondary schools is that they are so large that unless you can manage to have one point of contact, information can get lost in the system.
Other than that, I don't know what to suggest I'm afraid, but it isn't acceptable the way they are carrying on. Keep on their backs, they will soon get sick of you!
Good luck.
Tina