Luv Bunnies
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2006
- Messages
- 9,097
My 12 year old son has Asperger's and started middle school yesterday and I'm already frustrated! And the problem is that I started taking steps to avoid this frustration months ago (or at least I thought I did).
My son tends to be very disorganized. He doesn't write things down and he doesn't sweat details that he deems unimportant. He was OK in elementary school because he had a teacher for 4th and 5th grade who went above and beyond in trying to keep him on track. With all the class switching and additional resonsibility of middle school, I strongly felt he would need a one-on-one aide, at least for the first few months to get him into the groove. I had written recommendations from his psychologist and psychiatrist and backing from his classroom teacher and resource teacher. The special ed. director saw it differently. He told me his decision had nothing to do with money or resources, just with what the student needs. So you'd think my son's case would be a no-brainer and he would be assigned an aide with so many people in agreement. Nope, didn't happen! The resource people were supposed to take turns sitting in his class for the first 4 periods of the day and for the first 2 days of school, that didn't happen (I don't know why - the principal is checking into it).
So yesterday, my son couldn't tell me whether he needed his P.E. clothes or not. He didn't remember what the coach had said about bringing them. So, I decided to send them in his backpack just in case. He had a brand new shirt, shorts, shoes and lock in a plastic bag. He took them to P.E., only to find out he didn't need them until Monday. But, afterschool when I picked him up, the bag was nowhere to be found. He couldn't remember what he did with them after leaving the locker room. I had to try to retrace his steps with him. We tried lost and found and his homeroom. I finally went to the principal who paged the coach who didn't know where they were. I guess I barked at the principal a little and said, "This is exactly why he needs an aide!" She was part of the decision not to give him one. She didn't have much to say at that point.
We finally found them in his elective classroom next to the desk he sat in and only because that teacher happened by and said she thought there was a bag in her classroom.
My husband is ready to get a lawyer. My son is totally capable of handling the classroom work. He just really needs help with organization, focus and sometimes behavior. I think an aide is a proactive way to help him get on track. By the time the teacher has to stop the class to remind him about something, it's become a negative situation. Now my son feels bad that he lost his clothes and thinks he's stupid. He always gets down on himself when he forgets something important but it's not his fault.
Thanks for letting me vent. The other problem is that I work at another school in the district in a special ed class so the special ed director that controls resources for my son is also my boss. I'm trying to keep my job separate from the situation with my son and I hope he will too. Any advice would be appreciated.
My son tends to be very disorganized. He doesn't write things down and he doesn't sweat details that he deems unimportant. He was OK in elementary school because he had a teacher for 4th and 5th grade who went above and beyond in trying to keep him on track. With all the class switching and additional resonsibility of middle school, I strongly felt he would need a one-on-one aide, at least for the first few months to get him into the groove. I had written recommendations from his psychologist and psychiatrist and backing from his classroom teacher and resource teacher. The special ed. director saw it differently. He told me his decision had nothing to do with money or resources, just with what the student needs. So you'd think my son's case would be a no-brainer and he would be assigned an aide with so many people in agreement. Nope, didn't happen! The resource people were supposed to take turns sitting in his class for the first 4 periods of the day and for the first 2 days of school, that didn't happen (I don't know why - the principal is checking into it).
So yesterday, my son couldn't tell me whether he needed his P.E. clothes or not. He didn't remember what the coach had said about bringing them. So, I decided to send them in his backpack just in case. He had a brand new shirt, shorts, shoes and lock in a plastic bag. He took them to P.E., only to find out he didn't need them until Monday. But, afterschool when I picked him up, the bag was nowhere to be found. He couldn't remember what he did with them after leaving the locker room. I had to try to retrace his steps with him. We tried lost and found and his homeroom. I finally went to the principal who paged the coach who didn't know where they were. I guess I barked at the principal a little and said, "This is exactly why he needs an aide!" She was part of the decision not to give him one. She didn't have much to say at that point.
We finally found them in his elective classroom next to the desk he sat in and only because that teacher happened by and said she thought there was a bag in her classroom.
My husband is ready to get a lawyer. My son is totally capable of handling the classroom work. He just really needs help with organization, focus and sometimes behavior. I think an aide is a proactive way to help him get on track. By the time the teacher has to stop the class to remind him about something, it's become a negative situation. Now my son feels bad that he lost his clothes and thinks he's stupid. He always gets down on himself when he forgets something important but it's not his fault.
Thanks for letting me vent. The other problem is that I work at another school in the district in a special ed class so the special ed director that controls resources for my son is also my boss. I'm trying to keep my job separate from the situation with my son and I hope he will too. Any advice would be appreciated.