Yeah, and the fact is that you don't want to recommend a student for testing/diagnosis right away because you're not sure either way and don't want to start anything with the parents. The teachers, in this case like you said, are really the ones to suffer because they're caught in the middle of trying to figure out whether or not they should recommend the diagnosis. Hopefully it changes, though. :S
Yea, this attitude will totally win you over the kind of woman I describe. Not.
It took my partner and I decades to find each other. Do other things until then. Really, if not finding a GF makes you so hopeless then you need to get out more. Love is amazing and wonderful, but it is not all there is to life. Not even close.
Second thoughts can generally be amended with judicious action; injudicious actions can seldom be recovered with second thoughts.
--Cyteen by C.J.Cherryh
Did you get diagnosed yet?
As far as I'm aware, we can't recommend the student be tested for ASD. Last I knew, our teachers weren't even allowed to suggest that a child may be on the spectrum - because they aren't trained in diagnosis. Instead, I think it's more about encouraging the family to work with a psychologist or counsellor who can get to the root of the problem.
Before my son was diagnosed, a casual preschool teacher mentioned his autism. I replied "you said 'autism' - why do you think that?". I swear you've never seen a teacher backpedal so hard!
Never regret anything that has happened in your life. It cannot be changed, forgotten or undone. So, take it as a lesson learned and move on.
Wow, that must have been one awkward moment for both of you! haha And that might have changed here then. All I can remember is that my brother was recommended for testing and tutoring by his one elementary school teacher when he was diagnosed with dyslexia. But that was, perhaps, the early 2000's. But I can see why it would change; most parents wouldn't really be comfortable with someone who is only licensed to teach diagnosing their child. It would be like having a mechanic build your house- they don't have all the knowledge.
I expect he's just regrouping and will be back soon. He's done suicide threats and taken breaks before
Never regret anything that has happened in your life. It cannot be changed, forgotten or undone. So, take it as a lesson learned and move on.
Sissy's original meaning is "sister", i.e. female... it shouldn't be used as a synonym for "coward". :-)
Anyway I also wonder what happened to him... I hope he didn't carry through with it, for the sake of his family and friends.
A good point. I'll use "pansy" instead.
Don't worry, he'll be back again.....and "crying wolf" again too
Never regret anything that has happened in your life. It cannot be changed, forgotten or undone. So, take it as a lesson learned and move on.
Is it a gay slur? I didn't know that... homophobic slur against males usually has roots in sexism against women, too. It's the (supposed) femininity of gay men that makes them so unbearable to homophobics.
Yep. Pansy = gay, it's basically a less extreme and somewhat old fashioned version of faggot, albeit with very different (and nowhere near as ****ed up) roots.
Definition: ausually disparaging : a weak or effeminate man or boy busually disparaging : a male homosexual
History: c.1450, from M.Fr. pensée "a pansy," lit. "thought, remembrance," from fem. pp. of penser "to think," from L. pensare "consider," freq. of pendere "to weigh" (see pensive). So called because it was regarded as a symbol of thought or remembrance. Meaning "effeminate homosexual man" is first recorded 1929.
Middle English pancy, pensee, from Middle French pensée, from pensée thought, from feminine of pensé, past participle of penser to think, from Latin pensare to ponder
Date: 15th century