rathbone
Lovin' The Homestead
I am in the education field. I am going to make a few suggestions and you use what fits you.calendula said:lorihadams, I know what you mean about reading with your son and moving. My little guy will jiggle the whole time, and of course he will make his sounds because of his tics. But, he wanted me to read JRR Tolkein's The Hobbit to him, and I was pleased to find that even though he is always squirming and making his sounds, he is listening and following the story, and he loves it.
I think that's part of what the teacher doesn't get. Yes he's moving and making sounds, but he is still listening and learning. But, then it goes back again to him disrupting the rest of the class, and making it so that they can't learn. So, I understand how his teacher gets frustrated, but he just can't help it. Depending on what happens after this appt. with the nuerolgist and how the rest of the year goes, I think you are right, we are going to have to figure out some way to make homeschooling work. I just can't take seeing him so sad anymore, and I worry about permanent effects to his self esteem.
hillfarm, I am glad if my post can help! There is a lot of info about Tourette's on the web. I read that most kids eventually "grow out of it," which is a big relief! I hope everything works out for you!
One of the golden rules is that each child be educated in the least restrictive environment. If they try to put your son into a different classroom on the grounds that he is disrupting the other children's learning - you are allowed to point out that moving him would not be the least restrictive environment. They are really only allowed to move him if he is physically hurting other children.
Another thing that I like to start my conversations with teachers is this: "I am naturally feeling a little sensitive about my child and his behavior. I am going to ask you to do a favor for me. Since you and I talk often about my son's behavior - I hear a lot of negatives. I am going to ask that for every negative thing you point out about my child, please tell me a positive also". This will not only help you as a parent - it will put your teacher in the mode of looking for positives.
More than anything else -please inform yourself, educate yourself, edify yourself. You are your child's advocate. There is help out there that you would never dream of. It is a lot of work, but you need to understand the law. Schools will naturally push around parents that don't know their rights...schools often don't even realize the parents have such rights.
And I guess lastly, approach your teacher with the attitude that the two of you are a team trying to do what is best for your child. Let the teacher know that you trust her, that you are relying on her to go above and beyond the call of duty to help him get an education alongside all the other children that are easy to teach. Look her in the eyes, touch her arm and appeal to her. Teachers are usually desiring to help people. It may help her to reach deep down and find more inside herself to give.
edited to add: Do you have an iep for him? If not, look into a 504 plan.
Regarding your reading of the Hobbit: my sons move like crazy. Someone else here mentioned it earlier but - I let them move. I laugh when I tell the story of how we were doing our nightly reading and I got a black eye. My sons seriously do ninja moves while I am reading. One did a flip onto the couch and kicked me in the eye. I had a black eye for two weeks. It wasn't funny at the time but now I can laugh about it. These are MY kids and they are not just like everyone else's kids. This is going to be a hard row to hoe so to speak, but I bet your son is going to grow up to be an amazing person.