T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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616.1 | | BARSTR::PCLX31::satow | gavel::satow, dtn 223-2584 | Tue Oct 26 1993 13:46 | 12 |
| First let me say that I really admire you for what you're doing.
Diagnosing learning disabilities is complicated stuff; it can be as simple as
needing different glasses, or as complicated as a neurological disorder, or
even a combination of causes. If I were you, I would report your
observations, to the girl's teacher, and any reading specialist or special
education person at her school, and her parents if you have any contact with
them. I'm a bit amazed that nothing has been mentioned to you; I would think
that if they were aware of any problems, they would let a tutor know, and if
they aren't aware of the problem by fifth grade, they aren't doing their job.
Clay
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616.2 | | FSDEV::MGILBERT | Education Reform starts at home.... | Thu Oct 28 1993 10:58 | 4 |
| Joyce,
You might want to check out ASABET::LEARNING_DISABILITIES.
Mike
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616.3 | | MILPND::J_TOMAO | | Thu Oct 28 1993 11:15 | 3 |
| Thanks for the input folks, and Mike thanks for the pointer.
Joyce
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616.4 | | MILPND::J_TOMAO | | Wed Nov 03 1993 16:00 | 15 |
| Well to let folks know.....I have been using the
::LEARNING_DISABILITIES notesfile as a source of information and
suggestions.
But as an update:
I talked to the child's teacher yesterday and was informed she was
tested but the teacher "hasn't had a chance to review the results" I
plan on talking with the teacher again next week and if I'm not
comfortable with the response I get I plan to elevate this to the
assistant principle (this is the proper course of action for a Digital
Volunteer)
Thanks for your help here and in mail,
Joyce
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616.5 | | STRATA::STOOKER | | Thu Apr 14 1994 15:02 | 50 |
| I had a conference with my daughter Jessica's teachers last night. She
is in first grade. The teachers are basically telling us that Jessica
is "FAR BEHIND" the other kids in the class. Jessica had had some
testing done earlier this year where the team had a conference and they
had referenced ADD several times. I had talked with Jessica's
pediatrician about this after the team conference and asked about
further testing on Jessica to see if she has ADD and maybe medication
will help her. Any way, her doctor referred her to a psychologist
whom I talked to about Jessica's problem. He sent me some forms for
Mrs. Quinlan, the Special Ed teacher, and us to fill out. Well I got
them back last night and read them and these forms really depressed me.
These forms indicate that Jessica has very low esteem and that she has
an "inability to attend", "inability to express herself", and
"occaisionaly depressed". Jessica is used to tuning out, she has no
quick recall, very little word retrieval ability, and although her math
skills are satisfactory for routine adding and subtracting, abstract
tasks have no meaning for her.
I asked if they thought Jessica is so far behind that she will need to
be held back in 1st grade. Mrs Quinlan said that it was a
possibility, but that it would be a decision made as a team including
her, the special ed teacher, the speech teacher, the guidance teacher
and us. The special ed teacher is already indicating to Mrs. Quinlan
that Jessica should be held back. This really scares me if she has to
stay back in first grade, more for her esteem than anything else.
Mrs. Quinlan said that Jessica would probably need Special Education
as long as she is in elementary school, and since that is true, then
she will have help next year in second grade as well. She will never
be able to understand why she is being held back and I don't have any
idea how we'd explain this to her. So, the school is going to run
another test on her called the "gesel (sp?)" test to see how her
developemental age in compared to her chronological age. This test is
based on nationwide results for her chronological age.f Mrs. Quinlan
says that she doesn't feel that her developmental age is extremely low
compared to the other children in the class, but that she is
definitely behind.
The question I guess we will have to decide once the test comes back is
to determine, whether being held back will hurt her more (esteem wise)
than sending her on and hoping that with the special help she will be
able to keep up. But, how do we know what is best for her. If she
has poor esteem now, won't holding her back and telling her that she
won't be able to step up to second grade with her friends do more harm
than good?
So Confused. Any suggestions, inputs?
Sarah
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616.6 | My self esteem went down when I wasn't kept back | AIMHI::DANIELS | | Thu Apr 14 1994 15:48 | 29 |
| My parents, with the best intentions in the world, started me early in
1st grade (this was probably more easily done 30 years ago than now).
Some things I was very good at - others not so good. As I struggled
(with tutoring) to keep up with math, history, science, I kept falling
further behind. My main problem was I was too young/immature to handle
the extra tasks.
I didn't have any learning disabilities, but I ended up in a special
ed. class in 5th grade and I ended up there for
6th grade. I didn't really belong there either, but some skills were
so far behind. I did a lot of working to get to more "normal" classes
and I didn't have ADD, just too young a start. (My mom has felt so bad
over all of this).
Anyway, in the effort to preserve her self esteem this year, you may
really be hurting it far more in the long wrong. She isn't able to
really keep up with her class, so the illusion of being part of her
class will become more apparent to her and her classmates as time goes
along. That can be so damaging. It certainly was for me.
The point is - it took me, without ADD, a long time to recover from
being in classes where I didn't know what was going on. Also, just as
I was catching on (physically/mentally maturing to the other kids
ages), another year went by and I'm in a new grade with a whole new set
of subjects I couldn't keep up with.
How does Jessica feel about all this? She might be relieved to have
the chance to relearn the material.
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616.7 | typo | AIMHI::DANIELS | | Thu Apr 14 1994 15:49 | 1 |
| .6 - I meant long run, not long wrong.
|
616.8 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Apr 14 1994 16:11 | 3 |
| re .5:
I suggest you cross-post in ASABET::LEARNING_DISABILITIES.
|
616.9 | | GAVEL::PCLX31::satow | gavel::satow, dtn 223-2584 | Thu Apr 14 1994 16:24 | 32 |
| > .6 - I meant long run, not long wrong.
Sure you didn't subconciously mean "long wrong"? It seems to apply. Thanks
for sharing the story.
I have mixed feelings on this one.
First, my son is now in fifth grade. He has a couple of friends who were
retained in first grade. That difference, while somewhat visible then, is
for all practical purposes forgotten now. And of the kids we've known
that have repeated a grade, the ones who did it early seem to have
worked out better than the ones who did it late. As .6 points out, for a
child to continually struggle, the damage to self esteem is continuous and
ongoing.
On the other hand, I'm a bit concerned. ADD is not a learning disability in
the sense of not being able to understand the concepts. It is a learning
disability more in the sense of being able to control attention and behavior.
Of course, if the child has difficulty along these lines, they may not be
learning the material. But many ADD kids understand the concepts perfectly
well; they just can't show that they understand in the same way as other kids
can. So be very careful of who does the testing, and how. Make sure it's
that she really doesn't understand the material, not that she just isn't able
to do well on a test or can't concentrate on her homework. If that's the
case, and the ADD can be controlled by medication or otherwise, then the
retention MIGHT be unnecessary.
I suggest that you also consult the ASABET::LEARNING_DISABILITIES notesfile
and that you learn what your rights and responsibilities are for your state.
Clay
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616.10 | RE: 616.5 | DECWET::WOLFE | | Thu Apr 14 1994 19:39 | 22 |
| I'm currently in a class on Learning Disabilities - what a controversial field,
both in diagnosing and treatment. Currently we are looking at attention
disorders and I found it interesting that the "radical thinking " author of the
book we are reading states "That a fundemental weakness is the difficulty in
knowing exactly what attention deficits are. Is the so called attention deficit
due to overall lethargy, an inability to sustain attention, an inability to
select the right thing to concentrate on, a problem focusing too narrowly within
the area requiring attention, lack of motivation or an inability to filter out
unncessary information?". The author points out some interesting research.
Unfortunately this book is not an easy one to read. I could ask my instructor
for some recommendations (he is working on his Phd in Special Education) if you
are interested.
Our instructor (who is also a reform thinker with regard to special education)
also discussed the idea of "holding back students". He said this is common
practice with learning disabled kids but usually the year they repeat looks just
like the first one. He suggests maybe the reason the child didn't get it the
first year has to do with the teaching method, materials, environment (etc.) and
if the child gets the "same" year over their chances for improvement or catching
up are slim.
Just some thoughts.
|
616.11 | | GAVEL::PCLX31::satow | gavel::satow, dtn 223-2584 | Fri Apr 15 1994 09:09 | 13 |
| >Is the so called attention deficit
>due to overall lethargy, an inability to sustain attention, an inability to
>select the right thing to concentrate on, a problem focusing too narrowly
>within the area requiring attention, lack of motivation or an inability to
>filter out unncessary information?".
Interesting, though I have to wonder about the "overall lethargy" in that
many ADD kids are considered "hyperactive". The other things mentioned are
very intriguing ways of looking at the problem.
Clay
|
616.12 | A different teacher for the same year? | AIMHI::DANIELS | | Fri Apr 15 1994 10:38 | 5 |
| RE. 10
Maybe if they could repeat the year, but with a different teacher, it
wouldn't be rehashing the same old thing, so the year might be better.
|
616.13 | Thanks... | STRATA::STOOKER | | Fri Apr 15 1994 11:17 | 19 |
| Thanks for the ideas and input. I will cross-post this in the
Learning Disability file when I can decide which topic it belongs
under. I'm still having a hard time trying to determine what is the
right thing to do. I'm glad that I still have about 8-10 weeks of
school left before I have to make some type of decision. Hopefully, I
will have all the information gathered and Jessica has seen this new
doctor. Everyday, I notice more and more about how distractable she
is and how whenever I ask her to do something, anything can distract
her from that task. I end up asking her to do something many times,
and I'm sure she is feeling like I'm picking on her and then she starts
yelling and screaming at me. Its so frustrating. Its also extremely
weird how much she loses her short term memory. I'll ask her what she
had for lunch today and she cannot remember to tell me, but she can
come up with some memories that are several years old and can tell us
exact details about that memory.
Once again, thanks for the input.
Sarah
|