TPP 016: Understanding and Navigating the Parent-Teacher Relationship with Becca Wertheim
TILT Parenting: Raising Differently Wired Kids
English - July 12, 2016 07:28 - 37 minutes - ★★★★★ - 883 ratingsKids & Family parenting differently wired adhd autism learning disabilities gifted twice exceptional education school homeschool Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
For this episode I talk with Becca Wertheim, a second-grade teacher at an inclusion school in North Carolina. What I hear from so many parents in the Tilt community is that navigating the world of school is one of the biggest challenges their families face, so this episode is the first of what I hope will be many featuring the perspectives and voices of the teachers who work with our differently-wired kids every day.
Becca tells us about her experience as a teacher charged with meeting the individual educational needs of a group of students with diverse learning styles, and her insight for parents who are looking for better support and communication with the teachers in their children’s lives.
Becca Wertheim is a 2nd grade teacher at Claxton Elementary School in Asheville, NC. She is the creator GOAL Getters (Global Opportunities, Awareness, and Leadership), an initiative featured at Clinton Global Initiative University, which teaches youth about global citizenship and social responsibility. She is also the author of Live High on Life for Teens, an inspirational book that empowers teens to dream big, and was profiled in TiLT founder Debbie Reber’s inspirational book for teen girls, In Their Shoes.
THINGS YOU’LL LEARN FROM THIS EPISODE:
How an “inclusion school” model works in the classroom
Why inclusion schools can benefit all types of learners and work to everyone’s advantage
Suggestions and strategies for navigating the parent-teacher relationship, from a teacher’s perspective
Why honesty and open communication, as is true in any relationship, is key to a successful parent-teacher relationship
How parents can approach a teacher if they are concerned about their child’s behavior either at school or at home
What a teacher’s goals are in the relationships they have with their students’ parents
RESOURCES MENTIONED:
Claxton Elementary School
Becca Wertheim on Huffington Post
Support the show
Connect with Tilt Parenting
Visit Tilt Parenting
Take the free 7-Day Challenge
Read a chapter of Differently Wired
Follow Tilt on Twitter & Instagram
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
For this episode I talk with Becca Wertheim, a second-grade teacher at an inclusion school in North Carolina. What I hear from so many parents in the Tilt community is that navigating the world of school is one of the biggest challenges their families face, so this episode is the first of what I hope will be many featuring the perspectives and voices of the teachers who work with our differently-wired kids every day.
Becca tells us about her experience as a teacher charged with meeting the individual educational needs of a group of students with diverse learning styles, and her insight for parents who are looking for better support and communication with the teachers in their children’s lives.
Becca Wertheim is a 2nd grade teacher at Claxton Elementary School in Asheville, NC. She is the creator GOAL Getters (Global Opportunities, Awareness, and Leadership), an initiative featured at Clinton Global Initiative University, which teaches youth about global citizenship and social responsibility. She is also the author of Live High on Life for Teens, an inspirational book that empowers teens to dream big, and was profiled in TiLT founder Debbie Reber’s inspirational book for teen girls, In Their Shoes.
THINGS YOU’LL LEARN FROM THIS EPISODE:
How an “inclusion school” model works in the classroom
Why inclusion schools can benefit all types of learners and work to everyone’s advantage
Suggestions and strategies for navigating the parent-teacher relationship, from a teacher’s perspective
Why honesty and open communication, as is true in any relationship, is key to a successful parent-teacher relationship
How parents can approach a teacher if they are concerned about their child’s behavior either at school or at home
What a teacher’s goals are in the relationships they have with their students’ parents
RESOURCES MENTIONED:
Claxton Elementary School
Becca Wertheim on Huffington Post
Connect with Tilt Parenting
Visit Tilt Parenting
Take the free 7-Day Challenge
Read a chapter of Differently Wired
Follow Tilt on Twitter & Instagram
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices