Vegas Seagull
New member
- Jul 10, 2009
- 7,782
Have you given a presentation to the class or assembly to help spread awareness?
One of my students is taking part in this program - http://www.sst-institute.net/
If you want the contact details of the people running it, send me a text.
A quick update in the interests of sharing the positives as well as the negatives (and being a proud dad and showing off a bit I will admit it).
My boy just came in the top 2% in Australia in a maths competition. Very proud of him for doing this as he didn't really want to.
That brain of his is really amazing.
I work in the university sector, and we have the occasional student with dyspraxia and the occasional 'high functional' autism. Also we have the occasional student with mental health issues (different issue, but I'll lump this in for reasons that will become clear). The way we deal with this is not great. First, with exam scripts we are told to note 'learning difficulties'. This is quite useful, but frankly it can be hard to determine whether any jumbled text is due to problems with expression or problems with understanding (the latter would have to merit a reduction in marks). More diffilult are mental health issues. We are told the student has them but not what they are. We have a postgrad working with us now in this situation, and its problematic. He is a bit disinhibited, meaning he has said things that have require my having to have 'a word' after complaints. But I don't really know how to deal with it since I don't know what the problem is. I could ask him, but he doesn't know necessarily that we have been told of an issue. The college won't say for reasons of confidentiality. In fact I know about it nly because this was the reason I was given when his BSc finals were deferred. All in all it's not ideal. Where I work my colleagues are smart and we muddle through, but there is huge scope for problems. Anyway... great that your boy has found a bit of success
My sons autistic and although we haven't used it yet we have a band that goes around his wrist (like the help for heroes etc) just in case we go somewhere that may be too much for him. He has a 1 to 1 at school and are finding that she is being used to help with other children, we really had to fight for his funding so that gets to me. Also parents of badly behaved kids that just try and get them signed off as autistic when you can see its shit parenting. Hay ho.
Thanks mate. My boy is 10 and during our diagnosis we have often discussed the confidentiality theme. Many people have talked about their child being labelled and the negatives that come with that. The way i see it is that they are going to be labelled anyway because of their behaviours and difficulties. The way my boy often presents himself is a a rude and naughty child, so i would prefer he is labelled as autistic or Aspergers.
I was told by one of the teachers on this particular excursion that because he had been rude to another parent the teacher had to be seen to speak to my wife (even though it was not the best thing to do in the circumstances). He said that he didn't know if he could tell the lady in question about my sons condition this was particularly galling as i have made it clear during several meetings and training sessions that I am fine with people knowing. Someone mentioned wrist band in this thread which i have suggested to the school.
I think the confidentiality thing is indicative of the way society views these types of conditions. If we acknowledged that people are different and need to be treated a little differently and found a way to be okay with that then perhaps those that need to would become a little more understanding and compelled to find out a little more about it.
The upshot is that he nor we have nothing to be ashamed of and I think that if people know what they are dealing with then more are likely to give him a little wriggle room and perhaps the assistance he needs.
And this is the problem. As an ex classroom teacher and pastoral care tutor over 30 years, I have seen many changes, one of which is the reference to the many conditions that children now have. I am not for one moment doubting the sincerity of those who have spoken from the heart on this thread, or indeed doubting that autism exists, but the pressures on teachers to provide specialist treatment and tuition,(which many here understandably expect for their child) on top of the needs of 29 others, can be overwhelming. And there is always the suspicion that the condition might be used as an excuse - I am NOT defending teachers who are negligent, or who could not care less, but sometimes the situation is not black and white. Children will sometimes pick up on the fact they can have special consideration, and there is pressure on the teacher from the other kids to treat everyone equally, even if staff know it is largely unrealistic.
I still vividly recall an incident in the 1990s, when the issue of ADHD was in its infancy, and there was much scepticism, when the parents of a terribly disruptive 16 year old boy jumped on his diagnosis to demand all sorts of extra provision, which the school attempted to provide, to the extent of ferrying him home away from others, because of his behaviour on public transport. When asked to provide a reference for him to join the Army, I told parents that in all honesty I could not put my name to such a request due to the risks involved -if he cannot travel on a bus without putting others in danger, then he surely cannot be trusted with a machine gun, or worse. It was amazing how normal his parents then maintained he was, and that alongside other applicants, he should be treated exactly the same.
IT is easy to blame teachers, and for all I know, you may be quite justified, but the situation must also be seen from the school's viewpoint. There are many conditions, all of which need specialist treatment -you may have the autistic child, but there may be others in the class with conditions, of which you are unaware, all of which puts pressure on staff.
I think you're absolutely spot on. As time passes, ideas about what one might call 'disability' are changing. However, it will take a little while before society has quite worked out how to untangle what I might call useful disclosure on the one hand, versus confidentiality and privacy on the other. The answer I suspect is that disclosure should be a matter for the person (or the parents if the person in question is a kid) and management thereof should be done properly with staff training. I think its the latter that is done worst right now. Hopefully it will change.
Here is one for you. A mate of mine, in his late 60s, developed Parkinson's. So he needs to take L-DOPA to keep his body under control. The problem is L-DOPA speeds up the neurodegeneration that is the basis of the condition. But my mate is a pharmacologist, and he finds the whole thing quite facinating. So he take a pill in the morning, then lets it wear off during the day. Consequently his gestures become more flamboyant during the day. If he's out to dinner, his solution is to say 'I have Parkinson's and I don't take my pills after midday because I want to preserve my brain cells. You may find some of my wild arm swings disturbing'. It certainly breaks the ice
Vivre la difference!
I think the fact that you are prepared to use someones Autistic child to have a pop at them on a football message board speaks volumes about the validity of your thoughts on the matter. Especially after 30 years of pastoral care
You have my sympathy as far as your kid is concerned, but think you have been a bit unfair there. I thought Hastings Gull was merely putting a bit of balance to the discussion from the school/teacher perspective.
I think the fact that you are prepared to use someones Autistic child to have a pop at them on a football message board speaks volumes about the validity of your thoughts on the matter. Especially after 30 years of pastoral care
I think the points he makes here are valid. However I was referring to another occassion on a different thread that for me provides some extra context to his points.
I think the fact that you are prepared to use someones Autistic child to have a pop at them on a football message board speaks volumes about the validity of your thoughts on the matter. Especially after 30 years of pastoral care
The usual arrogant rubbish from you, when I was actually trying to steer an even keel. Why are you talking about me using a football message board -you started it on a football message board! No one forced you to start the thread on a football message board, so you should hardly complain about others views on a football message board. And as for having a pop -were you not doing precisely that with your complaints about teachers, who have no chance to answer. After 30 years of pastoral care, I am quite entitled to voice an opinion on the matter, and have far greater experience than you, and I know that the issue is not simple. You are an outraged parent, and see things from that inevitably though understandably narrow perspective - I gave you an alternative thought from the school's standpoint.