TupperMom7
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2004
- Messages
- 1,317
Hello. My son is 17 and has had an IEP since preschool. He didn't learn to talk until he was almost 3, but then sort of caught up. His school had us take him for tests because they thought he had epilepsy because he would daydream, an eye specialist because he got more answers wrong on one side of the page than the other, and a psychologist because they thought he had ADD (no hyperactivity, just distractability). All the tests showed he did not have any of those things. Researching on my own, I came across CAPD as it was called then - Central Auditory Processing Disorder - for those unfamiliiar with this, it means that he hears just fine, it's just that he doesn't process what he hears correctly. He might hear it differently than everybody else. Outside noises pay a big part in his processing difficulties as he might hear some of them with what he is supposed to be hearing and jumble it all together. Then in 7th grade, the school asked us if they could change his IEP to list him as Learning Disabled. They wanted to get him the services that he needed and the lable of CAPD wasn't doing it because evidently the school doesn't take that as seriously! So we changed it.
My son is immature for his age. He is 17, but emotionally more like 12. He enjoys the typical video games, TV shows, and computer games that most teenagers enjoy. He is working on his social skills as he doesn't always know what is appropriate behaviour.
My question (finally, right!) is this: His dad, whom I am still married to and he still lives here, etc., never has gotten along with him. Ever since he was a small child. I don't know if it's because he has a disability or what, but he has no patience with him at all. He never talks to him except to bark out orders at him and he always yells, never in a normal tone of voice. He does this with our other children as well. He really should take a parenting class, but I don't think he thinks there is anything wrong with the way he talks to our son or the other kids. He doesn't swear at them (well, unless he is really pissed, lol) but it's just his tone of voice, and he starts right in on him the minute he sees him. Example: Any Saturday, first thing he sees him "I want that room cleaned today, it's a mess"....the kid just got up and hasn't even eaten breakfast yet. A little later "is your room cleaned up yet?" and on and on it goes until finally he cleans it. Do they have support groups for parents of learning disabled kids? A class or something to teach them to cope better and to communicate with them better? Whenever I correct my husband he says "I'm always wrong no matter what I do", blah, blah, blah, but I can't just stand by and have him yelling all day long, can I?
Thanks to anyone who read through this horribly long post
My son is immature for his age. He is 17, but emotionally more like 12. He enjoys the typical video games, TV shows, and computer games that most teenagers enjoy. He is working on his social skills as he doesn't always know what is appropriate behaviour.
My question (finally, right!) is this: His dad, whom I am still married to and he still lives here, etc., never has gotten along with him. Ever since he was a small child. I don't know if it's because he has a disability or what, but he has no patience with him at all. He never talks to him except to bark out orders at him and he always yells, never in a normal tone of voice. He does this with our other children as well. He really should take a parenting class, but I don't think he thinks there is anything wrong with the way he talks to our son or the other kids. He doesn't swear at them (well, unless he is really pissed, lol) but it's just his tone of voice, and he starts right in on him the minute he sees him. Example: Any Saturday, first thing he sees him "I want that room cleaned today, it's a mess"....the kid just got up and hasn't even eaten breakfast yet. A little later "is your room cleaned up yet?" and on and on it goes until finally he cleans it. Do they have support groups for parents of learning disabled kids? A class or something to teach them to cope better and to communicate with them better? Whenever I correct my husband he says "I'm always wrong no matter what I do", blah, blah, blah, but I can't just stand by and have him yelling all day long, can I?
Thanks to anyone who read through this horribly long post