patchchild
Mouseketeer<br><font color=deeppink>Shorties of th
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2004
- Messages
- 1,036
Hi Denise,
I'm a special education teacher and have been for five years now. It can be so tough when you're just getting used to the whole system and all the jargon, especially because it can seem like the school officials "must" know what they're talking about, even when it runs counter to what you know about your son. At times I hate being there as part of the school since meetings can get really confrontational.
The best thing I can say is, trust yourself. Ask lots of questions, and then some more questions, and a couple of questions after that. Especially with testing, a lot of the infpormation they'll share with you comes out in jargon. Keep asking them what things mean for your son in real life.
As for the self-contained classroom, I'd really advise you to be hesitant. Once kids get into these programs, it's generally very hard to get them back out. I'd strongly suggest really pushing the school to find out EXACTLY what his day would look like. At my school, we do have a self-contained room, but it's more like homeroom for the students. They check in at the begining and end of the day but are in the mainstream classroom for the majority of their day with an aide. It really helps assure that all the kids are being pushed to reach the highest level they can. Also, peer models are such an important factor to consider.
Basically, question, question, question, and then follow your gut. You know your son better than anyone else at that meeting. They know their school and have a lot of experience with hundreds of kids, but you know your son.
Feel free to PM me with any specific questions as you're running through things. I'm happy to help if I can.
I'm a special education teacher and have been for five years now. It can be so tough when you're just getting used to the whole system and all the jargon, especially because it can seem like the school officials "must" know what they're talking about, even when it runs counter to what you know about your son. At times I hate being there as part of the school since meetings can get really confrontational.
The best thing I can say is, trust yourself. Ask lots of questions, and then some more questions, and a couple of questions after that. Especially with testing, a lot of the infpormation they'll share with you comes out in jargon. Keep asking them what things mean for your son in real life.
As for the self-contained classroom, I'd really advise you to be hesitant. Once kids get into these programs, it's generally very hard to get them back out. I'd strongly suggest really pushing the school to find out EXACTLY what his day would look like. At my school, we do have a self-contained room, but it's more like homeroom for the students. They check in at the begining and end of the day but are in the mainstream classroom for the majority of their day with an aide. It really helps assure that all the kids are being pushed to reach the highest level they can. Also, peer models are such an important factor to consider.
Basically, question, question, question, and then follow your gut. You know your son better than anyone else at that meeting. They know their school and have a lot of experience with hundreds of kids, but you know your son.
Feel free to PM me with any specific questions as you're running through things. I'm happy to help if I can.