T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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606.1 | Peer problems? | CUPMK::TAKAHASHI | | Tue Jan 08 1991 11:28 | 16 |
| Patty, I don't consider myself an expert on this subject, but I do have
a couple of things to say.
My nephew (age 7, second grade) was very upset about going back to
school this year. He has attention deficit disorder (ADD). Anyway, I
think the reason he was so upset about going back is because he feels
different from the other kids. Also, the other kids teased him a bit.
Do you think your son is having trouble getting along with his peers
and this is the reason why he doesn't want to go (rather than the
boredom, etc.)?
Anyway, my nephew is now very happy in school and my sister brings him
to some type of occupational therapist who teaches him
social/interactive skills. Maybe something like this will work.
Nancy
|
606.2 | Same with my son! | TUNER::CLEMENT | | Tue Jan 08 1991 12:12 | 28 |
| I am having the same problem with my son who will be 5 in February.
He has started his crying fits and complaining he doesn't feel well on
the mornings we have to go to school. His pre-kindergarten class is in
the same school he was in last year and he has the same teacher and
some of the kids are the same. When I ask him why he pulls this stuff
every Tuesday and Thursday (class from 8:30 - 12:15) he tells me he is
bored. I did find that on the days when he knows there is no school
and he is going to stay at the day care, he doesn't give me a problem.
I think what he hates most about school is the rules and the structured
activities like learning his alphabet, numbers, etc., whereas in the
day care it is structured but it's a different kind of structure
(reading books, coloring, outdoor play, etc.).
When he pulls these stunts, we ask him what he wants to be when he
grows up and he tells us and our reply back is "If you want to be
_________ then you need to go to school to learn all there is to know
in order to become what you want. This seems to have worked for us, he
stops his crying and when I get home at night, he is so excited and
tells me all about his day. An I know he is learning something,
because now he will pick up the newspaper and spell each word and ask
me what they mean. He really wants to start learning how to read.
I'd be interested in knowing what school you son goes to and what
teacher he has. You can send me a mail message to TUNER::CLEMENT or
phone me at DTN 264-4465.
Regards,
|
606.3 | Add and my niece | CLOSET::VAXUUM::FONTAINE | | Tue Jan 08 1991 12:23 | 25 |
| Patty,
I don't know much about this but, my niece has ADD. At five years old
she practically couldn't put a sentence together because her mind would
jump to another thought and she'd be unable to hold a thought very
well. I remember many frustrating times I'd try to hold a short simple
conversation with her like "what game is that?" and she'd look at me
and reply "where's aunt rosie?". She really didn't know how to listen
or concentrate on anything. They finally discovered that it was ADD.
She now goes to an occupational therapist. The results were really
amazing. I saw the difference in her within a matter of months! She
would think before she spoke. (One aside, because of her
attention/concentration problem, her motor skills were behind and she
was about 1 1/2 years behind where she should have been development
wise). They worked with her motors skills and I mean she's doing very
well now. She'll be 7 in a week. It's worth checking into the
possibility of ADD. By brother in law and sister in law were so glad
they did.
I can't imagine the frustration when you feel lost when other kids can do
things well and do them for a relatively long time and having no ability
to do it yourself no matter how much you may want to.
Good luck, I hope you can zero in on the problem soon.
|
606.4 | | RAVEN1::HEFFELFINGER | Vini, vidi, visa | Tue Jan 08 1991 12:54 | 20 |
| I would echo the suggestions to check the possibilty of ADD. But from
my uninformed layperson's point of view it would seem to me that he CAN
concentrate (you gave some examples yourself) he just doesn't.
Perhaps he's just the kind of kid that has a different learning style.
You said he does well at daycare with the more physical stuff and that he
enjoyed (at least for a while) playing cards as a way to work on numbers.
You might want to check into the Montessori schools. I understand that they use
a lot of movement in learning. Some people just do better when learning
kinetically. Another possibility is a Waldorf school. I understand they
advocate waiting to develop reading skills until quite a bit later than most
schools. and concentrate on learning to think and explore mentally. (I sure
I've mangled what they do horribly in my description but I can point you to two
sources of information on Waldorf: 1) Note 35 in this conference has information
on Waldorf Education 2) Neil Faiman (one of our moderators :-) ) has a child in
a Waldorf School and is quite an advocate for them (to the point that I am
considering looking for a Waldorf School here when the time come for Katie to
start school.)
Tracey
|
606.5 | Yes, check for a Learning Disability | 57784::SATOW | | Tue Jan 08 1991 14:12 | 116 |
| A long repetition of previous advice.
I also recommend that he at least be evaluated for an attention deficit (AD)
problem. Your town may have some program attached to the elementary schools,
or your pediatrician may be able to recommend a source, or you can look in the
learning disabilities notesfile (asabet::learning_disabilities) for evaluation
sources.
The experience that I speak from is that my daughter has an attention deficit
problem, so I have my own observation, plus I have done some reading on the
subject.
re: .4
> I would echo the suggestions to check the possibilty of ADD. But from
>my uninformed layperson's point of view it would seem to me that he CAN
>concentrate (you gave some examples yourself) he just doesn't.
re: .0
> he can sit for a VERY long time
> concentrating very hard on something and do very well at it, without
> being distracted, . . . he is
> COMPLETELY engrossed by some television shows, to the point that you
> could remove all the furniture in the room, and as long as the T.V. was
> still on, he'd never know you were in the room. So he CAN concentrate
> with AMAZING ability
The ability to concentrate sometimes is _not_ an indication that there is no
AD problem. There is a video game in the waiting room of the learning
disorders unit of a major hospital. Some kids with _serious_ AD and
hyperactivity problems can concentrate totally on that video game. But if the
activity doesn't "grab" them, they lack the ability to focus their attention
on their own.
I don't like to diagnose over the net, but there are many things about your
sons behavior pattern that are typical of children with AD problems. To point
out a few:
> When he's not at school, he's at a home
> daycare with his younger brother, and 2-3 other younger kids. I also
> wonder if part of the problem may be that he is only interacting with
> much younger kids outside of school, and would prefer to act like a 3
> year old than a 5 year old (sometimes displayed in other behaviors).
AD is defined in terms of "age appropriateness". That is, an attention span
that is appropriate for a three year old is not appropriate for a five year
old. So if he does have and AD problem, he may do very well interacting with
younger kids, in a setting that is designed for younger kids, and where the
activities are either unstructured, or are structured for kids with the
attention span typical of their age, and in which his different attention span
doesn't "stick out".
> When he was switched to pre-K, he was ECSTATIC!! He LOVED
> his new teacher and the new class . . .
> Now over the past few school-weeks, all of his old feelings about
> school are coming back, but much more intensely negative.
AD kid often do well in new settings for a period of time, because the
"newness" keeps their interest. But then as the newness wears off, the
distractions -- like being tired, hot -- start to affect them.
> He is easily bored with writing and/or
> identifying letters/numbers, but he doesn't KNOW them. He tries for a
> few minutes (does pretty well), gets bored, and then just doesn't even
> try anymore. . . . If you MAKE him think about it, he'll tell you.
AD kids often APPEAR to be bored, when the real problem is that they they
simply can't focus their attention. When you MAKE him think about it, you may
just be helping him to do that which he can't do himself.
> . . . to the point of aggressive/dangerous behavior.
This is an almost word for word description of one (of several) symptom of AD
problems. Even if they understand the potential consequences of their
actions, they lack the ability to restrain themselves.
> there is
> something WRONG and we haven't been able to put our finger on it, and
> he isn't able to explain/identify it, except to know that it's at
> school.
If there is an AD problem, a school setting is where it is most likely to
manifest itself. That's where concentration is required. That's where,
it's most difficult to limit distractions. Our daughter takes medication
(ritalin), but only on school days.
> If he can't get his socks on, he'll scream and throw them down and
> start crying and stomp out of the room.
One of the things that has been very hard for us to deal with is the fact that
our daughter has major explosions -- goes completely out of control, becomes
totally irrational, etc. over (to us) absolutely trivial incidents. If I
remember correctly, the same mechanism that controls the focusing of attention
span also controls the ability to control behavior.
> Patty who has the "What have I done to my Child??" Blues....
If it IS an AD problem, there is NOTHING that you did. As far as research
knows now, it's physiological, not psychological. But one thing I would
caution you about is to understand that it may be something he CAN'T do -- as
opposed to something he WON'T do. Focus on the behavior, don't apply value
judgments:
> Even if you get
> him to look at it, he just DOESN'T CARE. He KNOWS that it's an H, but
> he could care less to tell you that.
He may care very deeply. He just can't do it. I don't mean to lecture to you.
I just know how guilty I felt when I thought that my daughter wasn't trying
very hard to learn her spelling words or her multiplication tables when in
fact she was probably trying a hell of a lot harder than most kids in her class.
Please feel free to contact me off line.
Clay
|
606.6 | | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Tue Jan 08 1991 14:27 | 10 |
| Tracey beat me to it ...
My own inclinations would be to wonder why a child in a pre-kindergarten
needs to be learning to write and identify letters and numbers. In our
school, kindergarteners color, play, learn songs, listen to stories, etc.
I guess if your son wonders why he has to do all this stuff, I sympathize
with him.
-Neil
|
606.7 | Sounds like Steven | TLE::RANDALL | Where's the snow? | Tue Jan 08 1991 16:23 | 64 |
| Just from your base note, your son sounds a lot like my Steven,
who doesn't suffer from any kind of learning disability. He just
doesn't handle pressure well.
And I found out from stepping back and listening to him that I put
a lot more pressure on him to behave well all the time than I
thought I did. I was always supportive of his artistic endeavors,
etc., so I didn't realize how often I was landing on him for
basically just being -- even wiggling too much while he was
sitting.
But a few months ago I realized that compared to most kids his
age, he's an absolute angel. Kat was always such a quiet loner,
although sociable, (like her mother) that I wasn't prepared to
deal with a real extrovert who isn't happy unless there's another
person around. He doesn't even like SLEEPING alone. So a lot of
the feedback I was giving him was based on a gut reaction of not
liking his personality style. I was trying to turn him into a
quiet introvert.
A regular but not rigid schedule helped provide some structure
within which he could move more freely. I try to make sure he has
more unstructured time where he doesn't have to meet anybody's
expectations, especially mine. Neil and I each try to spend some
time alone with him, without any of the other kids or the other
parent around.
He might need a different approach to learning. For instance, an
extroverted child usually likes to work in groups doing team
projects; if his class and teacher are set up to favor the
work-alone style, he might feel very uncomfortable and implicitly
criticized. A child who prefers structure, like my eldest, is
often distracted to the point of boredom in an open-concept
classroom -- or vice versa.
Perhaps he's not ready yet. I know with all the emphasis on
early reading and so on, US society assumes a kid starting school
should already know this stuff, but not everybody is. Maybe he
just needs some time off to try again later.
Do members of your family read and write at home? If he doesn't
see people around him using words and numbers regularly, he quite
likely won't see any reason why he should learn it.
Steven was helped by getting into an individual athletic activity
(gymnastics, in his case, but karate and swimming are other good
ones, and I'm sure the other noters will have ideas) that helps
him burn off energy, learn how to control his body, and feel good
about something he can do. As he learns to do more with his body,
he seems to be less out of control emotionally.
The bouts of lack of control are worse when he's in the middle of
a growth spurt or hasn't had enough sleep.
I certainly wouldn't discount the possibility of a learning
disorder, and having him evaluated would be a reasonable step. If
it is a learning disability like ADD (another possibility is a
seizure disorder; petit mal seizures lasting fractions of a second
can cause a child to lose concentration and control) it should be
treated before it compounds itself into a negative self-image.
But I wouldn't push it, either.
--bonnie
|
606.8 | GETTING AN ASSESSMENT | ISLNDS::AMANN | | Thu Jan 10 1991 12:07 | 32 |
| You are entitled to a special education evaluation of your child.
Contact the special needs department of your school and tell them
you want an assessment.
The school will get back to you and tell you that you have the
right to a pre-assessment meeting. Go to the meeting and tell
them what you want assessed (i.e. why does he hate school, why
doesn't he pay attention, etc.)
You should get the assessment back in a few weeks.
At that time the school should be able to tell you precisely what
they've discovered and what steps they will take to help. For
example, they might provide some sore of occupational therapy
as other noters have mentioned.
If you are *not* satisfied with the school's assessment - if you
don't understand it or don't believe it - you are then entitled
to an independent evaluation. At the indepenedent evaluation
you get to choose where you want to take your child (for example,
I've had my son into Children's Hospital in Boston where they've
given him a full day of tests ranging from psycho-neurological tests
to simple tests of academic skills).
Good luck. It's great that you have recognized the signs of your
child hating school so early. Some kids get through the early
grades and don't display their lack of interest in school until
they're in later grades, when there's less time left to help them.
--dick
|
606.9 | So much GREAT Advice!! | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Thu Jan 10 1991 18:28 | 80 |
| Hi,
THANKS so much for all the replies!!! It's helped a lot for me
emotionally and also knowing that there is some help available. The
school he's in now mostly focuses on blaming someone rather than trying
to really FIX the problem.
I am going to have him tested to see if something is wrong. I think
that I will probably go after both his doctor AND the public school at
the same time so that we can be SURE that we get lots of testing and
hopefully uncover whatever (if!) the problem is.
In the meantime, and understanding a little more about ADD, we are
working with him 1 on 1 so that we can try to be more helpful to him
and to whoever ends up testing him. At the advice of one of the notes
here (Steven's mom - sorry!), I have taken a step back and tried to
watch how *I* behave with him, and whether it may just be my
perception. It seems to be mixed in that a) I do tend to be a bit hard
on him at times, and b) he does tend to act immature for his age. Over
the past couple days, I've tried to treat him - emotionally- the same
as I would treat my almost-3 year old, and the difference has been
ASTOUNDING!! We've dropped the whole alphabet/number thing for a
while, but otherwise, intellectually, we've still be treating him like
he's 5, but when it comes time to get ready or during playtime, we give
him the same kind of space/freedom/forewarning that we give his younger
brother, and he seems to be responding well. Which sort of leans me
toward the possibility that he may have ADD. ... or maybe I'm just
coming down on him too hard, and he's appreciating the letup. Hmmm.
But now the plot thickens ..... my husband has completely shut off, and
will barely even discuss the topic. He is convinced that his son is
fine and that there's no problem at all except that he's WITH little
kids, so he's going to ACT like a little kid. I brought home the
basenote and all the replies, and he wasn't even interested enough to
want to read them. A "What's this all about? The kid's fine!"
attitude. That's the attitude that we took last year, and it's only
gotten worse, not better. Have any of you had any experience with
this? I'm not looking to put a label on my son, and maybe (HOPEFULLY!)
there is nothing wrong with him, but I'm concerned that if he senses
the/any tension around the subject that it will only add to the
negativism that Christopher already feels about school (and himself!).
I've told my husband that I am going to have Christopher tested, just
to be sure. He is not supporting the decision, but probably won't
fight me on it. For Christopher's sake, I think we NEED hubby to be
supportive. Any ideas on how to do this?? Is this just a normal
denial reaction that will fade with time? Also, since I'm the one that
brings Christopher to school, he doesn't see the behavior as much as I
do, so that might be part of it.
And .... as a reply to the note (by Neil??) "If your kid is wondering
why he needs to know all this stuff, I sympathize with him" ... well,
maybe to a point. But the problem is that he's almost 6, and he does
not know his alphabet and he does not know his numbers, and he's
SUPPOSED to start 1st grade in the fall, but probably won't pass the
readiness tests, which means he's already a year behind right now.
A year may not be so bad to deal with, but for HIS sake, I want to
minimize how many years he is behind other children. *I* really don't
care if he doesn't learn to read till he's 12, but the fact of the
matter is that if he doesn't, he's going to be WAY behind the rest of
his peers, and the social pressures of being much older than your
classmates are pretty hefty. It's something that we'd really like to
avoid.
We're (well, I am!) going to check into the Waldorf and Montesorri
schools. I never realized that that was what they were for ... I
always thought they were for kids that were severely handicapped.
Christopher definitely has a unique learning style, and does learn much
better if he can be involved with whatever he's learning, and learns
MUCH better in a group. I guess we've always taught him that way too,
and have always tried to take something new that he's learning and
relate it to something that he already knows. He's really a very smart
kid - he's just not responding to what's going on right now. And, for
what it's worth, I've always been in support of those who march to a
different drummer.
Thank you so much for all your help and support -- it's meant SO much
to me and Christopher - I'm glad I came here with our questions!
Patty
|
606.10 | I'd definitely look at a different school | TLE::RANDALL | Where's the snow? | Fri Jan 11 1991 11:47 | 43 |
| Here's Steven's mom again.
Neil and I don't have quite the degree of disagreement that you
report with your husband, but Neil never was as concerned about
Steven's behavior as I was. I attribute some of it to sex-role
conditioning: behavior I don't see as acceptable for anybody he
sees as okay for boys. I know he wouldn't have put up with this
from Kat. And I suspect it's related to why girls often do better
in school than boys -- they're supposed to be more aqueiscent.
Boys are supposed to be more rebellious. I was convinced that
Steven was going to have all kinds of trouble in school, but so
far [halfway through first grade] there have only been a couple of
minor incidents.
In general I hold that if the parents have a gut feeling that
something is wrong, they're usually right, so if you really think
there's a problem, the testing is the right thing to do. But it's
possible that in this case your husband has a more accurate take
on the situation simply because he's a bit more detached. Would
it be possible for him to take Christopher to school for a while
so he can see the behavior you're talking about?
It's been my experience that when a five-year-old [with or without
learning disabilities] complains specifically about hating school,
it's often because he or she doesn't like something about the
people or procedure -- not getting along with the teacher, for
instance, or being bullied by bigger kids at playtime -- rather
than anything specific to learning. His school does not sound
like a particularly supportive or pleasant place to be, and if
their teaching style doesn't match his learning style, it could be
creating a problem that wouldn't exist in another context.
It does sound like Christopher might be emotionally young for his
age, but that's not a learning disability. But even if he does
wind up needing an extra year, it's not an end to his chances of
growing up to be president :) Kat's a year older than her
classmates -- I never thought of it as behind -- because we moved
to New Hampshire after the New York cutoff date but before the NH
cutoff. She's now a straight-A student, popular and happy, and
going out with a guy who's also a year older than his classmates.
It's pretty common in the Nashua school system.
--bonnie
|
606.11 | For Your Son | OCNJ::BOICE | When in doubt, do it. | Fri Jan 11 1991 12:03 | 15 |
| Some more free advice:
Please... Relax. Relax. Relax.
I side with your husband. There is nothing wrong with your son. He's
probably gifted just like every other kid is. But, from what you've
said, if I were 5-1\2, I know I would hate going to the school that your
son is going to. Think about it. Kids learn by playing, doing, and
being involved. I encourage you to look for a school that will let him
relax and have fun, and just discover the joy of learning. It would
make all the difference.
As for reading, kids will learn to read if they are read to a lot and,
especially, if they like what is being read. Topic 20, I think, has
some recommend books. Read only books he wants to hear.
|
606.12 | | CRATWO::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Jan 11 1991 15:49 | 23 |
| I thought that Clay, Neil, and bonnie gave quite thoughtful advice in entries
.5 - .7 (or whatever). The fact that they completely contradicted each other
just shows that these are tough questions to judge, particularly over the
net.
I don't know whether your degree of worry shows anything about the boy, but
it is worth attention anyway. I think you should seek an assessment through
your school system. You will all benefit even if the result comes back
"Normal!" Your concern is entirely appropriate, whatever the outcome, and if
there is a problem, the sooner you know about it, the better. Maybe you can
get your husband to support the assessment if he views it more as a response
to your worry than to a problem in the kid.
Different kids do prosper in different learning environments, and perhaps
something like Montesorri or Waldorf would be beneficial; they are certainly
not targeted at handicapped kids. I will also note that around here (metrowest
Boston) it has been very fashionable in recent years for the most competative
parents to conspire to have their kid be a year older than most others in
their class, on the theory that they will do better and gain more self
confidence. Of course, it is hard to arrange a class where every kid is older
than average, though they do manage something similar at Lake Woebegone.
- Bruce
|
606.13 | Now he likes it again! | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed Jan 30 1991 10:50 | 63 |
| Well, this hasn't been a whole lot of fun so far .... the Nashua Public
Schools refuse to test kids until they're at least 6 years old, and
only starting in Sept. They also only test for very broad learning
disabilities, and said that if there was something like an attention
span problem, that they probably wouldn't catch it (They'll test for
hearing, sight, dyslexia, retardation etc)
I've repeatedly tried to get in touch with his Dr. to have him tested
there, and have not had any of my calls returned. (I'm going to keep
trying though...)
In the meantime, we looked into the possibility of switching him to the
public kindergarten in hopes that things would smooth out for him, and
if he really _was_ tired, it's a shorter day, so should've helped
alleviate some of that for him. Come to find out that Nashua does not
bus Kindergarten children at all, and they also don't provide any type
of 'after-school' activities/babysitting or anything. If the
kindergarten classes run from 8:15-10:50 and 11:30 - 2:05 *HOW* do
working parents get their kids to school and back???!!!? It's beyond
me. Anyway, we decided that we would try to work out something, and
try to get him into the public school anyway. THEN we found out that
his school is not the school that's a mile from our house, right
between our house and the babysitters, but it's the school that's
downtown, 3 miles from our house, and 7 mi. from the sitters. Do other
people run into these types of problems?????
We finally decided to just try to talk to Christopher some more. When
we explained what his options were, he suddenly decided that his
current school wasn't so bad - and he's been quite happy there since
then. I think I've been had.
BTW - This is the same kid who just magically trained himself from
bedwetting - I wonder if the 2 were related?
The good news is that he seems thrilled again to be there. HOPEFULLY
this will last. I'd rather not have to explain all this again every
month or so.
Our next question is what to do in the fall. We think that
scholastically he could handle 1st grade, and emotionally he seems like
he's about the same as the other kids. We'll have him evaluated for a
recommendation for 1st grade or Readiness, but what we're wondering is;
How difficult is it (based on your experience) to take a kid that's not
used to going to school all day or every day, and put them in a
situation where they do go every day, all day ?? The public school
runs 1 break, lunch and a recess during the day (6 hours), so it's never
more than a couple hours before he can have a break. Do you think
that's too much all of a sudden? He's used to being at the babysitters
all day that he's not in school, so it's not a problem of being away
from home. Also, Readiness is the same length/type school day, so if
this was too much, it would mean Kindergarten (and I STILL haven't
figured out how someone could work that out!). Right now I think it
would be a struggle for him, but September is a long way off .... and
transportation for Kindergarten is a major problem! He'll be 6 in May.
Any advice/experiences would be greatly appreciated!!!
Thanks!
Patty
P.S. as far as the Waldorf school goes ... I could send him to UNH for
less than that! YIKES!!!
|
606.14 | Nashua Public School is wrong | 57133::AMANN | | Wed Jan 30 1991 11:34 | 45 |
| The Nashua Public School's policy is illegal.
PL 94-142 requires all schools in this country to identify, locate
and evaluate children with special needs from the age of 5 to 21.
In 1991 (which is now) the law has expanded to require inclusion
of children at the age of 3.
I suggest you put into writing what you want from the public school.
----------------------------------
Dear Nashua Public Schools:
I am afraid my 5-1/2 year old son may have learning disabilities.
I would like him to have a comprehensive CORE evalauation that would
include evaluation for specific learning disabilities, attention
defecit, speech and language, psychoneurological testing and other
tests that will assure we understand any special education or related
services he may need.
_______________________________________________________________
If the school will not do the testing, then ask them what you must
do to get a hearing to require the testing.
If the school's testing is inadequate in your view, you may, after
they test, get an independent evaluation at their expense.
If testing shows your child needs special education then, by law,
the school MUST provide you with transportation (even though this
transportation is not provided to other children his age -
educationally handicapped children are entitled to this. Indeed,
your child will have extra legal benefits if he is designated
as educationally handicapped that extend beyond transportation.)
Because educationally handicapped children have added legal benefits,
that create additional costs, schools are often inclined to
try to ignore parents and get away with whatever they can get
away with. You will need to become an advocate for your child's
needs with the school system.
I suggest you contact the Mass Federation of Children with
Special Needs (800- 331-0688) or (413) 562-3691 and ask them how
you can learn more about the New Hampshire Special Education rules.
Also, Buffy Dewey (508) 263-7993, has had a good deal of experience
with the New Hampshire schools and may know of other NH resources
available to you. Tell her Dick Amann suggested her as a resource.
|