T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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502.1 | my gut reactions | JAWS::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Tue Nov 13 1990 10:04 | 32 |
| My heart goes out to all of you. (I'm sitting here heaving great
sighs.)
>>They are thinking of putting him in a special school.
My gut reaction is that the last thing your nephew needs right now is
another upheaval. I would guess that he's acting out (consciously or
sub-) to get attention, to make sure someone, anyone, still cares about
or notices him. The teacher may need a little more background on
what's been happening and will happen in the family, and I think with
enough cooperation, weathering the current storm of misbehavior at
school is far preferable to another precipitous change. I think if he
were to change schools he might view it as punishment--that's not the
message your brother wants to give, is it?
Counseling, IMO, is definitely in order... Possibly your brother could
broach the subject by saying to his son, "I'm really having a lot of
trouble thinking about what's happening to our family, and I think I've
found a friend to talk to. If you'd like to come..." (I would just
try to avoid your nephew concluding that he must be CRAZY if his dad
thinks he needs a SHRINK.)
I'm sure your nephew is just testing boundaries--but everywhere, since
everything (school and home environments) is new and scary. Keep the
rules simple and consistent, and I would guess that with enough
communication between school, dad and counseling professionals, the
bumpy ride should smooth out a couple of months after rejoining his
dad.
Best of luck.
Leslie
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502.2 | for the family, not just for the boy | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Tue Nov 13 1990 10:44 | 14 |
| I agree with counselling, but it should be family counselling, not
just for the boy. It's a difficult and traumatic thing to lose
one's mother -- and it sounds like that's essentially what's
happening even though she's still alive. The girl might not be
causing obvious trouble, but that doesn't mean she's not having
trouble inside. And it sounds like your brother hasn't had a lot
of experience with parenting.
If they're at all religious, their church is liable to be a good
source of practical programs that go by such names as Family
Encounter and Parent Effectiveness Training. I don't know if
there are secular versions of those courses or not.
--bonnie
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502.3 | I know where your coming from... | MSBVLS::ROCHA | | Tue Nov 13 1990 15:54 | 69 |
|
Hi,
Boy this sounds familiar. I'm a foster parent and have had
about a dozen kids go through my house in the last three years.
And, both my wife and myself grew up with our parents doing foster
care so I've been exposed to kids in foster care for around 20 years
now.
I agree, he may need councelling. But before all that he needs
to understand two things. First he needs to understand that what
has happened to him IS NOT HIS FAULT! ,... So many kids believe
that if they had been better or had done something differant things
wouldn't be the way they are.... they need to know that the events
that led up to them being put in foster care ( or taken away from
Mommy ) were not their fault. Second. You brother needs to let
him know he's loved... talk to him, be honest. I love you and I
know all this isn't easy but no matter what happens and where things
go I want you to know I love you. You need to seperate the events
from the child. ( for example - You know, I know you pretty well...
and I know your a nice kid and a good person... and I also know
that you know that what you did was wrong so I'm having trouble
understanding why you would do it? Talk to me... help me to
understand. ) You'll be amazed at how honest kids can be.. once
the dam is open all his fears and heart ache will poor out.
I've had 12 year old kids going on 40 who's mothers were drug
addicts and prostitues... and I've had nice stable kids from a
single parent who ended up in the hospital for a long while.
Kids are basicly the same. They need that theres nothing they
can do that could make you not love them or care about what
happens to them.... they need guidelines to live by... they
need you to be consistant. If you say - if you do such and
such then such and such will be the punishment you had
better be ready to back up what you've said. They'll come
around once they know the guidelines and know they're loved. Its
especially important in this case because the kids could have all
kinds of info about Dad via Mom or.. the could feel he's partly
to blame... thats something he's going to have to deal with if thats
the case.
All in all... let your brother know that there are people who
understand what he's going through and it won't be easy.. but
the return on investment is wonderful... ask any parent.
Please send me mail off line if I can be of any help... and
you seen real concerned and your brother is fortunate he has you.
Keep being supportive of him... once he's got the kids full time
give him a little time off now... he's going to need it. And
let his kids know how lucky they are to have a Dad that loves
them so much.
Good luck, Tony
( PS - I don't know what kinds of problems the Mother has but if
your brother talks to social services he'll find out that there
are support groups for kids of alcoholic and drug addict parents
that are great for them to talk with other kids about whats
happened. I have one foster child in one of these programs right
now ... he's 7. He loves going... and when they're done they
can talk about the problems thier parents have and say to you...
" My Mom is an alcoholic and this is what that means and I had
nothing to do with it... I had no control over what happened." )
The younger kids deal with these type of things the sooner they're
back on track and the less chance of they're carrying the problems
into adulthood.
Tony
|
502.4 | Parents rights of special school placements | ISLNDS::AMANN | | Wed Nov 14 1990 12:04 | 50 |
| The school has no right to put any child in a special school unless
the parent approves. The school needs to right an Individual Education
Plan (IEP) that calls for the placement, and the parent needs to
approve the placement before it can occur.
the parent has the right to be in on the drafting of the IEP, and
the parent is free to reject the IEP. The parent can also reject
the IEP and demand an independent evaluation, at the school's expense,
to get other inputs on the child's needs. While this is going on,
the school is required to keep him in his current placement.
When the independent evaluation is done the school will do another
IEP, and the parent still has the right to sit in on the creation
of the IEP and can still reject the new IEP. If that happens, there
should be a hearing in which a hearing officer will make a binding
decision on the school.
In this country the educational laws require schools to teach children
"in the least restrictive environment" that will allow the child
(in Mass) to achieve his "maximum educational benefit." Thus, the
bias of the federal and state laws are for a child to be educated
in the local public school and in regular classrooms. Any
deviation from this requires the party wanting the deviation to
prove the child can attain greater benefit from the special placement
as opposed to the regular classroom.
The parent must be convinced of this or the parent should reject
the IEP calling for the special placement.
However, Marlboro is to be congratulated for showing the willingness
to spend money for a special placement. Many parents of children
with special needs are stuck in towns where such an offer would
probably never occur. In preparation for reviewing the IEP the parent
should ask to see the proposed facility, perhaps your brother will
be pleasantly suprised - it might be a proper placement.
At any rate, it's the parent that has lots of rights in an issue
like this - to accept or reject proferred placements.
P.S. According to Mass and federal law, the IEP - defining who
the child is and what the child's needs are - should be written
first, before the placement is decidied upon. It would be good
to have the school's educators on record as desiring a placement
before they've done an IEP, since this could be used by the parent
at the hearing - if it ever comes to that - to show the school was
not honoring the parent and students procedural safeguards. In
general, the Mass and federal laws have lots of safeguards meant
to protect the child and the parent's wishes and violations of these
safeguards are often taken as examples of the school being unwilling
to really do what is best for the child.
|
502.5 | another foster parent heard from... | BRAT::DISMUKE | | Wed Nov 14 1990 12:59 | 9 |
| I, too, am a foster parent, however in the state of NH. On thing that
every foster child is entitled to in NH is counseling. Your brother
can talk with his social worker about his son's problems and he will
receive the proper therapy. From what we are told in Foster Parent
Classes, these kids are almost always placed in therapy to make sure
they can effectively deal with what is happening to them.
-sandy
|
502.6 | What makes the mountain worth the climb??? | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Fri Nov 16 1990 09:11 | 22 |
| I can only restate what has arleady been said - he doesn't need any
more upheaval in his life; he needs consistency right now. It seems
like so much has happened over a short period of time that he is only
lashig out at yet another thing he cannot control. I would seek some
family counselling - it seems a family issue and getting acquainted
with each other and understanding the "rules" than him having the only
problem.
As for a "special school", I definitely don't think that is the answer.
I don't see how an "attitude" problem could be resolved in a special
school (unless you are talking military schools which breed frustrated
young men who have been under dominance and fear of break rules rather
than understanding that life functions in a certain way). He may need a
smaller class room environment to keep his attention thus controlling
his talking back, etc but any regular school should be able to
accomodate that.
Hope it all settles down soon for all of you and this Christmas and New
Year bring good things to all of you!!! Let us know how things are
progressing.
Andrea
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