1: US law onlyMy daughter was terminated from a class,without any warning from her teacher.She also is only 17. What type of lawyer do I need?
Let's start with the first one: US Law Only. (What US state are you in?)In the student discipline handbook the school is supposed to give a verbal or written warning non was gave. Teacher has not followed any procedure in the handbook. And she is a minor we were not informed about the termination.
What did your daughter do, exactly?My daughter was terminated from a class,without any warning from her teacher.She also is only 17. What type of lawyer do I need?
I really doubt that was all there was to it.California...teacher didn't like her asking too many questions
You do not need a lawyer at this point, you need a meeting with the principal and the teacher.My daughter was terminated from a class,without any warning from her teacher.She also is only 17. What type of lawyer do I need?
Again, meeting with the teacher and principal (or perhaps the appropriate dean and the teacher). That is the way to get to the bottom of things.I can see this happening. If the class was an advanced class and the student was not prepared (Trigonometry comes to mind, but many more would fit the bill), the teacher cannot spend the majority of the class time answering the questions of just one student, particularly if it is remedial information. I know I am supposing here, but I am just seeing it from the teacher's point of view.
From a parent's perspective: would you really want your child back in a class where the teacher had to be forced to take your child? Neither one of them would relate to the other in a positive, meaningful way after that.
Was your child put in a similar class or one that suited her needs better?
She should probably not ask the teacher a lot of questions, though.Perhaps you should talk to the teacher before jumping straight to a lawsuit.