Hi, H..
You may just have a normal Jr High boy going through a rough spell of puberty, but do you think your son might be gifted? The current educational term is high-ability.
With your testing, was it inclusive (also testing for hyper-activity and I.Q.)? My son is a 9th grader and he was tested back in first grade when the teacher thought he was "just too immature" for his grade and should be set back to kindergarten. Ends up he had an exceptionally high IQ and was simply making games to entertain himself thorough boredom. Maybe this is the case for you?
Joint Special Services is a tax-paid resource that serves our school, and all that was required of us for a full evaluation was a written letter to the school requesting testing to determine what was "different" about our son. They had 30 working days to complete the evaluation and it required surveys from the teacher, parent and facilitator. (Call your state's Board of Education and ask their advice.)
That created a whole new set of challenges. Indiana teachers are only required to receive three college credits in "high ability" student training for their teaching certificate. Most don't thoroughly know what to do with a kid outside the 100-120 IQ teaching norm. Kids 15 points outside either end of the scale have the same difficulty comprehending the average classroom. Remedial programs are often supplied to the lower end. The other kids fend for themselves. (It is thought that smart kids don't need help, but not all are self-paced. Einstein needed a personal assistant to count his change.)
Our school received grants for a Gifted and Tallented program, and I found out that we are only required to serve one classroom for those State Funds. But according to the No Child Left Behind policy, it is fair for parents to ask that the high ability students be taught at their level so that they also leave each grade with more knowledge than they had at the beginning of the year. After several years, I asked that my son be assigned a planning folder similar to the Individual Education Plan for remedial needs students. It follows him through each year so new teachers have something to review. (That is up to them, but it helps some.)
My son has had homework and classwork issues like yours through his entire school career, but always tested exceptionally well. (He found a loophole in Jr High school policy that stated he could not be failed if he tested well but didn't to the homework, as long as he had perfect attendance.)
I was worried this year because I know High School isn't like that - but he told me he'd make at least Cs to meet the new requirements. We've used groundings and rewards all of these years, but just last month, he finally found a goal that rationalizes more effort. He has the opportunity to attend a public gifted highschool for his Jr and Sr years if he keeps his grades up.
If this is the case for you, hang in there. I have been so frustrated with him because I have known he could do better.
If you are anywhere near Purdue, they have a Gifted Educational Resource Institute that offers gifted classes on Saturdays. The $300 was outside my resources most of the time, but it was good to see how tiered learning was handled in it's best form. (Our school paid for one class but we had to transport him.) GERI also has parent resources such as a library full of lots of info on how the gifted mind works.
Don't laugh, but giftedness is hereditary, and I looked back a couple of decades to my school records and found that I was gifted -- and all these years I thought that I was just "weird". I cried. I was only 9 points out of normal, but my son is 23. I cried for him too. Then I got busy being an advocate.
Hang in there. I hope this helps.
~~V. L
(By the way, I also discovered that a majority of skateboarders are gifted with higher mathmatics and physics comprehension... and it's rounded out with high muscle and eye coordination. They find challenge in that sport. I'm not coordinated enough. Ha-ha.)