ecki
Lovin' my Opposite Kids
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2008
- Messages
- 134
A bit of background here, since I'm new.....Kayla's been in an Easter Seals self contained full day/5 day a week preschool class since she was 2 1/2. She has Down syndrome and autism, is completely nonverbal and has very few signs (mostly she just signs "cookie" all day). And it's almost IEP time and I have 1/2 of her teachers and therapists wanting to keep her in the self contained class (10 kids, 1 teacher, 1 classroom aide) with her 1:1 aide. The self contained class she is in is completely nonverbal.
The other half are pushing me to put her in the integrated class (20 kids, about 25% w/disabilities, 1 reg ed teacher, 1 spec ed teacher) with a 1:1 aide because they think she should be around typical talking kids. They think Kayla will eventually talk and a class where all the kids are talking would be better for her.
I'm so stressed out. Although in theory I strongly support inclusion and integration, I can't imagine Kayla being the only one in the class that can't talk. And because of her autism she doesn't imitate behaviors or language, so would it really be beneficial to be around typical kids or would all the noise and activity be just too much for her (she is fairly sensory defensive).
But am I underestimating her abilities if I keep her in the self contained class? Her ABA teacher says she is the highest functioning kid in that classroom, which really blows me away. Kayla functions at about a 12 - 18 month level, so I'm wondering how much worse the other kids are. I have visited the class from time to time and although some of the other kids have behavioral issues, I see Kayla functioning about the same as her classmates.
Ugh. If I'm having this much trouble now, I'm really dreading transitioning to Kindy!
The other half are pushing me to put her in the integrated class (20 kids, about 25% w/disabilities, 1 reg ed teacher, 1 spec ed teacher) with a 1:1 aide because they think she should be around typical talking kids. They think Kayla will eventually talk and a class where all the kids are talking would be better for her.
I'm so stressed out. Although in theory I strongly support inclusion and integration, I can't imagine Kayla being the only one in the class that can't talk. And because of her autism she doesn't imitate behaviors or language, so would it really be beneficial to be around typical kids or would all the noise and activity be just too much for her (she is fairly sensory defensive).
But am I underestimating her abilities if I keep her in the self contained class? Her ABA teacher says she is the highest functioning kid in that classroom, which really blows me away. Kayla functions at about a 12 - 18 month level, so I'm wondering how much worse the other kids are. I have visited the class from time to time and although some of the other kids have behavioral issues, I see Kayla functioning about the same as her classmates.
Ugh. If I'm having this much trouble now, I'm really dreading transitioning to Kindy!