What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? CA
I share joint legal and physical custody with my EXH of our 2 children, ages 10 and 8. Due to distance, (we live about 45 miles apart) I see our children during the week on Wed. for 5 hours (which is more like 3 due to LA traffic) and then 3 weekends a month during the school year.
I am in the process of obtaining counsel to assist in making some modifications to my current agreement, additional time, and putting a halt to an over stepping step mom passing herself off as Mom at the school and everywhere else and just generally tightening up the order.
While I stay on top of our children's school work and communicate with their teachers, our children did not do very well in school last year. Our YD is an at risk reader and was placed in an reading intervention program, our MD has issues with reading, math, reading comprehension, etc. I do as much as I can during their time with me on Wednesdays, but the EXH has them in all manner of extra curricular activities, that shorten that time with me because of practices. When I ask the ex to limit the extra curricular activities, (he signs them up for soccer, softball, winter soccer, volleyball, ice skating lessons etc.) he says they are doing fine in school and that it's in the children's best interest to participate in these things. When I request a few extra hours of time with our children during the week, it is always meet with our children need to make school a priority, they aren't doing so well, so I can not have additional time. When I request that step mom not attend meetings that are designated for parents, because of her trying to discount my observations of our children (IEP and School Study Team meetings), he brags about how they both work in the classroom assisting in our children's education and so she will of course attend such meetings.
Because of mis-communication, and an ex that isn't the greatest at passing along information, I just received our MD's report card and her STAR testing results from last school year and she is not doing so well. Her reading and math are well below the average and her teacher indicated that she has a problem with basic math components.
So the legal question is, how do courts in CA look at education? Part of the modifications I would like to have put into place would be limiting the amount of extra curricular activities that the ex signs them up for, and stop the step mom from volunteering in the classroom and attending meetings with school personnel as well as additional time during the week.
Is education something that the courts take seriously?
I share joint legal and physical custody with my EXH of our 2 children, ages 10 and 8. Due to distance, (we live about 45 miles apart) I see our children during the week on Wed. for 5 hours (which is more like 3 due to LA traffic) and then 3 weekends a month during the school year.
I am in the process of obtaining counsel to assist in making some modifications to my current agreement, additional time, and putting a halt to an over stepping step mom passing herself off as Mom at the school and everywhere else and just generally tightening up the order.
While I stay on top of our children's school work and communicate with their teachers, our children did not do very well in school last year. Our YD is an at risk reader and was placed in an reading intervention program, our MD has issues with reading, math, reading comprehension, etc. I do as much as I can during their time with me on Wednesdays, but the EXH has them in all manner of extra curricular activities, that shorten that time with me because of practices. When I ask the ex to limit the extra curricular activities, (he signs them up for soccer, softball, winter soccer, volleyball, ice skating lessons etc.) he says they are doing fine in school and that it's in the children's best interest to participate in these things. When I request a few extra hours of time with our children during the week, it is always meet with our children need to make school a priority, they aren't doing so well, so I can not have additional time. When I request that step mom not attend meetings that are designated for parents, because of her trying to discount my observations of our children (IEP and School Study Team meetings), he brags about how they both work in the classroom assisting in our children's education and so she will of course attend such meetings.
Because of mis-communication, and an ex that isn't the greatest at passing along information, I just received our MD's report card and her STAR testing results from last school year and she is not doing so well. Her reading and math are well below the average and her teacher indicated that she has a problem with basic math components.
So the legal question is, how do courts in CA look at education? Part of the modifications I would like to have put into place would be limiting the amount of extra curricular activities that the ex signs them up for, and stop the step mom from volunteering in the classroom and attending meetings with school personnel as well as additional time during the week.
Is education something that the courts take seriously?