ireland_nicole
<font color=green>No brainer- the fairy wins it<br
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2008
- Messages
- 4,152
Hi y'all; I just wanted to get some perspective from other ASD parents and parents of extra special kiddos. This has been a super challenging year for DD. She's in 4th grade, and her grades are continuing to drop, although of course they're somehow magically staying at the 70% mark so she doesn't qualify for additional services. Go figure. They took her out of inclusion this year and put her in a mainstream classroom w/ a 1:1 45 minutes in the morning, and 20 minutes in the afternoon. DD has PDD-NOS so no autism services from the district, she' has an IEP under OHI for ADHD, Epilepsy and her immune deficiency.
We're having massive problems w/ the teacher fullfilling accomodations in her IEP, and have an ARD scheduled next month. Just got her OLSAT scores and I cried in the pantry after. It just seems every year the gap gets bigger and bigger, and nothing we do seems to help that.
Sorry for the long intro. DD is getting social support through a "social group" w/ the school counselor, and she does well w/ "surface" interaction. She says the right words from her script, and actually makes eye contact now most of the time when she first sees someone, which is awesome; but she doesn't know how to keep the conversation going. She does socialize for short periods of time reasonably well w/ kids 2-3 years younger as long as there is a directed activity. In fact, in her after care, she was moved w/ our permission to the younger group. The girls in her age group weren't outwardly mean to her, but they ignored her completely, and she was miserable. At the end of the day, she's so much happier now. But we were eating the other night and in the course of the conversation she mentioned casually and without emphasis (iykwim), very matter of fact, that the kids in her class call her weird and won't sit next to her, etc. She said that the girl assigned to sit across from her has pulled her desk back away from hers a few inches and that whenever Caitie's things touch hers she clorox wipes everything. I know I can't force social acceptance, it doesn't seem like they're "bullying" her in the strictest sense. They're just ostracising her. And though it doesn't bother her as much as it would a typically developing kiddo, she doesn't understand it, and it does make her sad when she thinks about it. My heart is so broken for her, but I don't know what, if anything, can be done to improve it. At least in the inclusion class she had social peers, because 4 of the girls had some level of mild/moderate developmental delay or difference, plus a couple of the boys, and so there wasn't just one kid who was "different". It was a third of the class LOL. I just don't know what to do at this point, and would welcome feedback, especially from those who have "been there."
Sorry so long-
Nicole
We're having massive problems w/ the teacher fullfilling accomodations in her IEP, and have an ARD scheduled next month. Just got her OLSAT scores and I cried in the pantry after. It just seems every year the gap gets bigger and bigger, and nothing we do seems to help that.
Sorry for the long intro. DD is getting social support through a "social group" w/ the school counselor, and she does well w/ "surface" interaction. She says the right words from her script, and actually makes eye contact now most of the time when she first sees someone, which is awesome; but she doesn't know how to keep the conversation going. She does socialize for short periods of time reasonably well w/ kids 2-3 years younger as long as there is a directed activity. In fact, in her after care, she was moved w/ our permission to the younger group. The girls in her age group weren't outwardly mean to her, but they ignored her completely, and she was miserable. At the end of the day, she's so much happier now. But we were eating the other night and in the course of the conversation she mentioned casually and without emphasis (iykwim), very matter of fact, that the kids in her class call her weird and won't sit next to her, etc. She said that the girl assigned to sit across from her has pulled her desk back away from hers a few inches and that whenever Caitie's things touch hers she clorox wipes everything. I know I can't force social acceptance, it doesn't seem like they're "bullying" her in the strictest sense. They're just ostracising her. And though it doesn't bother her as much as it would a typically developing kiddo, she doesn't understand it, and it does make her sad when she thinks about it. My heart is so broken for her, but I don't know what, if anything, can be done to improve it. At least in the inclusion class she had social peers, because 4 of the girls had some level of mild/moderate developmental delay or difference, plus a couple of the boys, and so there wasn't just one kid who was "different". It was a third of the class LOL. I just don't know what to do at this point, and would welcome feedback, especially from those who have "been there."
Sorry so long-
Nicole