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Thanks Patty,, it's great to talk to people (like you) who understand! It

really keeps me going. We are waiting to find out if my son qualifies for

homebound (or half days at school) and IEP so we have many things in the works

and most people are happy to help and understand more, unlike the principal, i

am not too worried about him anymore! We seen the doc today and made some med

changes (hopefully things are gonna get back on track soon)! Thanks again for

the encouragement!

>

> From: " ntrop31 " <ntrop31@...>

> Date: 2006/10/30 Mon AM 08:51:32 EST

>

> Subject: Re: School

>

> Hi, ,

> It made my blood pressure rise to read that your principal said other

> kids with this diagnosis come to school and do just fine!

> Unbelievable. How dare he! It is totally irrelevant what other kids

> do. The only thing the principal should be saying is what the school

> can do to help your son. Ask what kind of accommodations the school

> can make for him. He has legal rights to a public education. Please

> don't be intimidated by such unprofessional behavior from the

> principal. Best of luck to you. Patty

>

> > >

> > > My 14 year old son has not been in school for a month, due to med

> > > changes and increased anxiety, I talked w/his teachers and they

> were

> > > very understanding, now the principal is telling me he must be in

> > > school no matter what, i tried to explain, but he would not

> listen,

> > > any advice?

> > >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> > ---------------------------------

> > Talk is cheap. Use Messenger to make PC-to-Phone calls.

> Great rates starting at 1¢/min.

> >

> >

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Hey ,

I'm glad they are actively looking at your son's situation re

homebound or half days!

You mention learning difficulties, but is the work being sent home

things he is having a hard time understanding since he's not in the

classroom while teacher is teaching it? or is it just hard for him

due to those " learning difficulty " areas? any learning disability

(LD) diagnosed for him?

I was looking at our state school system website and with absences,

the problem seems to be for the number of UNexcused absences, which

your son has EXcused absences (illness, doctor excuse) so if

principal keeps being a *pain* in this area you might want to look at

your school system's site or state website.

If your son is feeling overwhelmed from falling behind in work, maybe

they can adjust the number of things he has to make up, e.g., reduce

the number of math problems he has to do or chapter questions or even

just so he completes any tests to show he know the subject.

Keep us updated on what happens! Hope the med change is for the

better too.

>

> Thanks Bonnie, bringing the therapist to school is a great idea.

And they are deciding whether he is eligible for homebound or school

half a day. We seen the doc today and he changed the meds (I hope

for the better) As far as the no computer, tv, games, etc until

after schoolwork is the best idea. I do need to be tougher in that

area. The problem is the schoolwork he has now he doesnt understand

( yes, he has always had learning difficulties). Just so many things

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Thanks

Tomorrow I will find out the decision about homebound and from there will have a

better idea of which directions things are going. I think the problem w/the

schoolwork is due to not being in the classroom, he is overwhelmed at the amount

of assignments they have sent home and worries about falling behind and maybe

having to repeat the 8th grade. I really don't think the learning difficulties

are a factor right now just alot of stress, anxiety. I am quit concerned about

him at the moment, he slept until 1 pm today and has now gone back to bed and is

sleeping(it is 8:30 pm) he has never been one to go to bed early or without

being told to. We seen the doc yesterday and he added geodon 40 mg 2x a day

along withbenztropin.5 mg (I have not given that yet) 2x a day to his current

meds ( prozac 40 mg 1x a day xanax xr .5 mg 1x a day and daytrana patch (ADHD)

1 x a day). Doesn't that seem like too much!?? I don't want to undermedicate him

but I don't want to overmedicate him!! Anyway I left a message for his doc to

call me to discuss it tomorrow. Sorry for going on I just felt the need to get

that off my mind for awhile and maybe get some feedback of any kind! Thanks

>

> From: " " <@...>

> Date: 2006/10/31 Tue AM 11:26:53 EST

>

> Subject: Re: School

>

> Hey ,

> I'm glad they are actively looking at your son's situation re

> homebound or half days!

>

> You mention learning difficulties, but is the work being sent home

> things he is having a hard time understanding since he's not in the

> classroom while teacher is teaching it? or is it just hard for him

> due to those " learning difficulty " areas? any learning disability

> (LD) diagnosed for him?

>

> I was looking at our state school system website and with absences,

> the problem seems to be for the number of UNexcused absences, which

> your son has EXcused absences (illness, doctor excuse) so if

> principal keeps being a *pain* in this area you might want to look at

> your school system's site or state website.

>

> If your son is feeling overwhelmed from falling behind in work, maybe

> they can adjust the number of things he has to make up, e.g., reduce

> the number of math problems he has to do or chapter questions or even

> just so he completes any tests to show he know the subject.

>

> Keep us updated on what happens! Hope the med change is for the

> better too.

>

>

>

>

>

>

> >

> > Thanks Bonnie, bringing the therapist to school is a great idea.

> And they are deciding whether he is eligible for homebound or school

> half a day. We seen the doc today and he changed the meds (I hope

> for the better) As far as the no computer, tv, games, etc until

> after schoolwork is the best idea. I do need to be tougher in that

> area. The problem is the schoolwork he has now he doesnt understand

> ( yes, he has always had learning difficulties). Just so many things

>

>

>

>

>

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Thanks

Tomorrow I will find out the decision about homebound and from there will have a

better idea of which directions things are going. I think the problem w/the

schoolwork is due to not being in the classroom, he is overwhelmed at the amount

of assignments they have sent home and worries about falling behind and maybe

having to repeat the 8th grade. I really don't think the learning difficulties

are a factor right now just alot of stress, anxiety. I am quit concerned about

him at the moment, he slept until 1 pm today and has now gone back to bed and is

sleeping(it is 8:30 pm) he has never been one to go to bed early or without

being told to. We seen the doc yesterday and he added geodon 40 mg 2x a day

along withbenztropin.5 mg (I have not given that yet) 2x a day to his current

meds ( prozac 40 mg 1x a day xanax xr .5 mg 1x a day and daytrana patch (ADHD)

1 x a day). Doesn't that seem like too much!?? I don't want to undermedicate him

but I don't want to overmedicate him!! Anyway I left a message for his doc to

call me to discuss it tomorrow. Sorry for going on I just felt the need to get

that off my mind for awhile and maybe get some feedback of any kind! Thanks

>

> From: " " <@...>

> Date: 2006/10/31 Tue AM 11:26:53 EST

>

> Subject: Re: School

>

> Hey ,

> I'm glad they are actively looking at your son's situation re

> homebound or half days!

>

> You mention learning difficulties, but is the work being sent home

> things he is having a hard time understanding since he's not in the

> classroom while teacher is teaching it? or is it just hard for him

> due to those " learning difficulty " areas? any learning disability

> (LD) diagnosed for him?

>

> I was looking at our state school system website and with absences,

> the problem seems to be for the number of UNexcused absences, which

> your son has EXcused absences (illness, doctor excuse) so if

> principal keeps being a *pain* in this area you might want to look at

> your school system's site or state website.

>

> If your son is feeling overwhelmed from falling behind in work, maybe

> they can adjust the number of things he has to make up, e.g., reduce

> the number of math problems he has to do or chapter questions or even

> just so he completes any tests to show he know the subject.

>

> Keep us updated on what happens! Hope the med change is for the

> better too.

>

>

>

>

>

>

> >

> > Thanks Bonnie, bringing the therapist to school is a great idea.

> And they are deciding whether he is eligible for homebound or school

> half a day. We seen the doc today and he changed the meds (I hope

> for the better) As far as the no computer, tv, games, etc until

> after schoolwork is the best idea. I do need to be tougher in that

> area. The problem is the schoolwork he has now he doesnt understand

> ( yes, he has always had learning difficulties). Just so many things

>

>

>

>

>

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  • 4 months later...
Guest guest

OCD is a mental illness. It should be covered under the OHI (other

health impaired). Definitely not behavioral. It's an anxiety

disorder.

It has a DSM code: 300.3

Definition (quickly copied off one website):

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV)

is currently in its fourth edition. This manual is published by the

American Psychiatric Association and is revised from time-to-time.

The DSM-IV is the official set of diagnostic criteria for mental

disorders in the United States. The categories generally correspond

to the international categories used in the International

Classification of Disease published by the World Health Organization

Another quick link for info/research:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mental_health_disorders

If what you come up with doesn't help, call your school system's

director over IEPs or call your state director for clarification.

Quick answer!

>

> Hi everyone. I haven't been here for a while so I'll give a quick

> update on my son. He has severe ocd and has struggled with

anxiety

> attacks at school for quite a while now. He has got even worse

over

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Guest guest

Thank-you Chris. I'm from Canada. Might make the difference but

your information gives me an idea of where to start looking. I would

like to write somebody a letter and try to get it changed. Thanks

again.

> >

> > Hi everyone. I haven't been here for a while so I'll give a

quick

> > update on my son. He has severe ocd and has struggled with

> anxiety

> > attacks at school for quite a while now. He has got even worse

> over

>

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Guest guest

,

What state do you live in. In MA OCD is considered a biological illness and

thus qualifies as a parity diagnosis. This means that we can get from the

insurance companies the same amount of unlimited visits, etc., that we get for

body based illnesses. I'm not sure how this translates to the school system,

however.

Imogene

school

Hi everyone. I haven't been here for a while so I'll give a quick

update on my son. He has severe ocd and has struggled with anxiety

attacks at school for quite a while now. He has got even worse over

the last couple months. It now takes him about 15 min. to change

classes and he then has numerous compulsions to do and by the time he's

ready to work he's lost as to what the class is doing and the class is

almost over. Then he has anxiety attacks over having got nothing

done. He has an IEP and an aide in the afternoons which helps some.

We went for a meeting yesterday to see if he could get an aide full

time. We were told that the principle has asked for more support for

my son but because " OCD " is listed as behavioral that he likely

wouldn't get any more funding because they don't give much

for " behavioral disorders. We've always been told by our doctor that

OCD is biological not behavioral. Does anyone here know anything about

how this all works? My son is severely impaired by his OCD right now

and I don't think it's right that he isn't funded for his illness

because someone has listed it as behavioral.

________________________________________________________________________

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at AOL.com.

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Guest guest

You might try running this past Dr. who is an advisor on our list.

Joye in Southeastern PA

rockydazzler1 <grizz140@...> wrote:

Hi everyone. I haven't been here for a while so I'll give a quick

update on my son. He has severe ocd and has struggled with anxiety

attacks at school for quite a while now. He has got even worse over

the last couple months. It now takes him about 15 min. to change

classes and he then has numerous compulsions to do and by the time he's

ready to work he's lost as to what the class is doing and the class is

almost over. Then he has anxiety attacks over having got nothing

done. He has an IEP and an aide in the afternoons which helps some.

We went for a meeting yesterday to see if he could get an aide full

time. We were told that the principle has asked for more support for

my son but because " OCD " is listed as behavioral that he likely

wouldn't get any more funding because they don't give much

for " behavioral disorders. We've always been told by our doctor that

OCD is biological not behavioral. Does anyone here know anything about

how this all works? My son is severely impaired by his OCD right now

and I don't think it's right that he isn't funded for his illness

because someone has listed it as behavioral.

---------------------------------

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Stay connected with on your mobile. Get started!

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You might try running this past Dr. who is an advisor on our list.

Joye in Southeastern PA

rockydazzler1 <grizz140@...> wrote:

Hi everyone. I haven't been here for a while so I'll give a quick

update on my son. He has severe ocd and has struggled with anxiety

attacks at school for quite a while now. He has got even worse over

the last couple months. It now takes him about 15 min. to change

classes and he then has numerous compulsions to do and by the time he's

ready to work he's lost as to what the class is doing and the class is

almost over. Then he has anxiety attacks over having got nothing

done. He has an IEP and an aide in the afternoons which helps some.

We went for a meeting yesterday to see if he could get an aide full

time. We were told that the principle has asked for more support for

my son but because " OCD " is listed as behavioral that he likely

wouldn't get any more funding because they don't give much

for " behavioral disorders. We've always been told by our doctor that

OCD is biological not behavioral. Does anyone here know anything about

how this all works? My son is severely impaired by his OCD right now

and I don't think it's right that he isn't funded for his illness

because someone has listed it as behavioral.

---------------------------------

Never Miss an Email

Stay connected with on your mobile. Get started!

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Guest guest

it should be under OHI - other health impairments - it is not

behavorial - how dare they!

eileen

Quoting rockydazzler1 <grizz140@...>:

> Hi everyone. I haven't been here for a while so I'll give a quick

> update on my son. He has severe ocd and has struggled with anxiety

> attacks at school for quite a while now. He has got even worse over

> the last couple months. It now takes him about 15 min. to change

> classes and he then has numerous compulsions to do and by the time he's

> ready to work he's lost as to what the class is doing and the class is

> almost over. Then he has anxiety attacks over having got nothing

> done. He has an IEP and an aide in the afternoons which helps some.

> We went for a meeting yesterday to see if he could get an aide full

> time. We were told that the principle has asked for more support for

> my son but because " OCD " is listed as behavioral that he likely

> wouldn't get any more funding because they don't give much

> for " behavioral disorders. We've always been told by our doctor that

> OCD is biological not behavioral. Does anyone here know anything about

> how this all works? My son is severely impaired by his OCD right now

> and I don't think it's right that he isn't funded for his illness

> because someone has listed it as behavioral.

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Hello everyone, My son is 9 years old and has been homebound since

Kindergarten and is now in the 3rd grade. He is registered at the

school in a gifted class so we have a teacher that comes to our

house after school to teach him advanced lessons.

We tried letting him go to school in the first grade but the first 2

weeks into school he started to get real sick and ended up in the

hospital for 4 weeks with something that he caught from school. So

the doc said to take he out of school and continue on homebound.

Socialization was a big deal at first with me. He loved the time he

spent in school with other kids and having friends and being able to

do art and music. But once we started homebound I got involved in

the homeschool association in our area. The do alot of things with

the kids, like field trips, art lessons, PE, park days etc. Things

just like public schoold offer. So he does not miss out on Social

skills.

Plus we have Wesley in Boyscouts and he does baseball.

He loves being able to stay at home and sleep late and do different

activities with the other homeschoolers.

I would not change anything! He is smart, he makes all A's and gets

one on one attention with his teacher. In our state we get 1 hour a

day no more then 5 hours a week for homebound. So we have school on

Mon, Tues and Thurs. We do 2 hour days and have off on Wed and

Friday from school. The teacher can do more in a 2 hour day then an

1 hour day. And having those days off gives in a break and time to

do something else like art, which is LOVES to do.

You can also think about doing Intermitten homebound, I know a

family here in SC that has a child with CVID that does Intermitten

homebound. The child goes to school 2 weeks out the month and is

homebound the last 2 weeks before his IVIG. And then if he gets sick

homebound kicks in for that time. And that works out good for them.

That is something else to think about doing.

I hope this helps.

Sally Blumenburg

Mom to Wesley CVID, Asthma, Allergies, Osteoprosis, Joint pain, GI

problems

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Guest guest

Wow. Thanks for all of the great responses. I'm glad to hear it's not totally

off the wall to keep our kids at home, and I really like the idea of the

homebound instruction. I don't have any problem following through on a teaching

plan, but I'd really like some help. Between the autism and the boys' health

issues, I don't think I have the energy to be creative and be in charge of

homeschooling them both.

Thanks again!

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Guest guest

, some of the homeschooling curriculums have built in counseling and

grading, etc..for instance, we use Seton and they grade a certain portion of

the boys' work and then give them a transcript. When was having

comprehension problems, they helped me tremendously! They will even help

make a Special needs curriculum for your child(ren), if needed.

www.setonhome.org <http://www.setonhome.org/> it is a Catholic Homeschool

but I am sure there are other curriculums out there like this that are not

Catholic.

Grace and peace be with you,

Pattie

" God made you as you are in order to use you as He planned " ~ J.C. Macaulay

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Guest guest

Thanks Pattie, I will definitely look into them. I've heard good things about

the Seton program and I like the fact that there's guidance for the parents. A

ginormous plus in my book.

Thanks so much!

RE: Re: School

, some of the homeschooling curriculums have built in counseling and

grading, etc..for instance, we use Seton and they grade a certain portion of

the boys' work and then give them a transcript. When was having

comprehension problems, they helped me tremendously! They will even help

make a Special needs curriculum for your child(ren), if needed.

www.setonhome. org <http://www.setonhom e.org/> it is a Catholic Homeschool

but I am sure there are other curriculums out there like this that are not

Catholic.

Grace and peace be with you,

Pattie

" God made you as you are in order to use you as He planned " ~ J.C. Macaulay

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  • 1 month later...
Guest guest

Clever kid - thanks for sharing enjoyed the laugh at BJ's incredible

cunning/problem solving.

Keep smiling

Jan, mother of Trent 22yo w/DS from the LandDownUnder

school

Hi all

well we had our first day back at school for term 2

Phone call at 11am to come and pick up a very sick boy ( their words- not

mine)

I pick him up and he is so excited to see me- he even tells his dad that he

is happy to be home. I ask him on way home where are you sick- he points to

his throat- i ask him when we get home were are you sick- I not he says with

chest puffed out

So i made him stay in his room on his bed for as much of the day as i

could- (i had to go to work at 2-30pm)-just so he could see how boring it

really is at home when you are sick.I have no idea how many times i made him

go back to his room- but i refused to let him come out. He really has his

teacher wrapped around his finger

No runny nose, no temp no nothing- he just told them he was sick so they

sent him home

hopefully by making him stay in his room - and not letting his sibs in

there- will make him think twice before doing it again

I think just wanted to see Natasha- he knows she is starting at his

school in a couple if days- and they have been told they are not allowed to

play together- so I think he just wanted to see her. But his behaviors have

been atrocious these past 2 weeks- at vacation care and

home-((sigh)) oh well we will see what eventuates.

thanks for letting me vent

--

Aussie Leis- mum to 9 DS , Natasha 5 and 3.

A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy

enough people to make it worth the effort.

Herm Albright (1876 - 1944)

Click reply to all for messages to go to the list. Just hit reply for

messages to go to the sender of the message.

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  • 2 months later...
Guest guest

I guess my thoughts are the opposite here. I would do the same for this

son as you did for the others. Not sending him to school does not mean

you can't seek therapies for him, does it? Or am I missing something? He

is just as much your child as the others are. If your gut has told you

to wait 'til a certain age, there is probably a good reason. My opinion

may not be a popular one, but thought I'd share it anyway.

Sheila

>

> Sherrelle I would send your son Kiandre to school at three. He could

benefit

> him, he also would lose out during that year you wait for his speech

to

> improve, give this school a chance

> dad to Jeanna 9 DS from Mays Landing NJ

>

>

>

> ************************************** Get a sneak peak of the all-new

AOL at

> http://discover.aol.com/memed/aolcom30tour

>

>

>

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Guest guest

In a message dated 7/12/2007 10:32:34 AM Eastern Daylight Time,

ksrb3@... writes:

Am I acting too

overprotective of him??? Or am I just being myself. I will appreciate

any feed back and opinions. Thanking you in advance.

AAHH the push to send our little ones with DS to pre-school early. After

Micah aged out of EI at 3 I continued to have services at home and then sent

him to pre-school for two years (a typical pre-school) They wanted me to put

him into a program when he was two years old ( ona a bus for 45 minutes to the

program and then 45 minutes home....NOT!!!) Follow your instincts. I will

tell you that my Micah has been in public school now for two years (we did

kindy twice) He is just really starting to put two and three words together

now as he had a moderate hearing loss due to fluid and his canals were to tiny

to do tubes until last May. The not taking is a hinderance but can be

overcome. You do what YOU think is best for your child. You know him best and

I

just feels that the nurturing they get at home cannot be duplicated. By the

way I am a mom to 5 kids with my oldest being 31 so I have been doing this

awhile. Glad I have been because I learned that Mom knows best. You do too!

Loree

************************************** Get a sneak peak of the all-new AOL at

http://discover.aol.com/memed/aolcom30tour

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I did not send my son ( 7yrs old) to school when he turned 3yrs old which

was in February. I waited until September because I did not feel he was ready.

started walking the August before he turned 3yr. We visited his school

several times and each time he would fall over if someone walked too close to

him or slightly bumped him. Safety issue! Maybe I was being overprotective but

I wouldn't change my decision. He is going to 1st grade this September after

repeating Kindergarten.

I did take him to the school for speech and ot.

Tricia

ksrb3 <ksrb3@...> wrote:

My son will be two in August. He will be aging out of his EI program @

three and I'am hesitant to send him to school. I would like to wait

till he is four. I also wanted to wait for his speech to improve. My

husband says that I'am too overprotective of him. But I did'nt send

my " typical " to school till four years old. Am I acting too

overprotective of him??? Or am I just being myself. I will appreciate

any feed back and opinions. Thanking you in advance.

Sherrelle mom to Kiandre 2 d/s

---------------------------------

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Guest guest

We sent my son, Ben to preschool an extra year before we sent him to school. He

started at the age of 4 and that was fine. If they aren't ready, they just

aren't ready just as typical children aren't necessarily ready for kindergarten.

M.

school

My son will be two in August. He will be aging out of his EI program @

three and I'am hesitant to send him to school. I would like to wait

till he is four. I also wanted to wait for his speech to improve. My

husband says that I'am too overprotective of him. But I did'nt send

my " typical " to school till four years old. Am I acting too

overprotective of him??? Or am I just being myself. I will appreciate

any feed back and opinions. Thanking you in advance.

Sherrelle mom to Kiandre 2 d/s

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Guest guest

Nic went into the " special " preschool at 3. It was 20 minutes away so I drove

him, I was leery about putting him on a bus or having a van pick him up. It

was only 2 3/4 hours but it was just like kindergarten, except they were

younger and all the kids had special needs. He did that until age 5. When he

became school age, I put him in a Life Skills Kindergarten which happened to

be held at our reg elem school. He did that for 2 years in order to develop

a strong base. From there he went into Learning Supports classes and has

been there ever since. His teacher told me she was quite pleasantly

surprised as to how much he knew....letters and their sounds even sight

reading.... Personally, I feel they are never to young to start learning,

not only academics but the whole school routine as well.

Di

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I was nervous about sending Vickie to school at three but she thrived. She

went to an intergrated preschool and was around a lot of same age roll

models for speech so that helped. so by sending your little one, his speech

may improve faster then if he didn't go

_____

From: [mailto: ] On Behalf

Of ksrb3

Sent: Thursday, July 12, 2007 10:30 AM

Subject: school

My son will be two in August. He will be aging out of his EI program @

three and I'am hesitant to send him to school. I would like to wait

till he is four. I also wanted to wait for his speech to improve. My

husband says that I'am too overprotective of him. But I did'nt send

my " typical " to school till four years old. Am I acting too

overprotective of him??? Or am I just being myself. I will appreciate

any feed back and opinions. Thanking you in advance.

Sherrelle mom to Kiandre 2 d/s

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  • 5 months later...

Once your son has a definite diagnosis - contact the school's 504

Coordinator (usually a teacher). Paperwork with be provided for yourself and

the

doctor to complete. Hunter's school was extremely difficult in the beginning -

but once the staff began to understand the disease - things became much more

tolerable. The school has no choice but to work with you - its the law.

Gotta go Hunter is calling. Sandi Ken Hunter (9 Systemic

**************Start the year off right. Easy ways to stay in shape.

http://body.aol.com/fitness/winter-exercise?NCID=aolcmp00300000002489

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Look under " Files " on this site. There is a lot of good info. on

navigating your way through a 504 plan. A lot of JRA kids have 504's

beause they include physical restrictions like PE (or allows them to

take tests verbally if they're hands are bothering them, don't have

to

carry so many books, etc.). IEP's are similar but better designed

for

learning issues (and sometimes behavioral like ADHD, etc.). A 504 is

just a legal way to ensure that the school will do only what is best

for your child. The school will still make mistakes, but it helps to

have something in writing. For right now though, a letter from your

Rheumy is good. It can take a long time to get a 504 completed.

I haven't started one yet for Isabelle but plan to for Kindergarten.

A lot of the moms can tell you more about the process.

-Hadley (Isabelle, 4yrs. on Jan 20!)

---

In , " nurse0300 " <nurse0300@...> wrote:

>

> I am wondering how and what you tell school as far as

restrictions.

> Caleb had a very hard time with gym this past week came home and

told

> me it wasnt working out I needed to talk to them it was becoming

very

> hard and painful for him. What do we do in this case just ask the

DOC

> for a letter or is there usually papers that we need to fill put

for

> the school? Last time I called the school they made me so mad I

> decided that it was a waste of my time to call them and tell them

what

> was going on all they could talk about was his missing school and

the

> possibility of failing, but when i asked for options such as a

tutor

> they didnt have any avaliable for us. err. They just made me so mad.

>

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Go to the School Counselor and let her know what is going on. Contact the Dr

for a Paper of Restriction for P.E. at least for a time being. I would

suggest instead of P.E. have your child do Health reports for the grade.

I would ask the Dr to write a Letter concerning Extra set of books and to

explain your child is under Dr's care at this time. At first it seems that

the School does not listen but be firm on it. Explain to your child what is

going on and to let you know what is going on at School. Also if you have a

School Nurse go to see her and explain what is going on. You can contact the AF

for Pamplets about Your Student has Arthritis. Get one for each Teacher and

those in the School who is in Contact with your child and hand them out.

Ask the Counselor about the 504 plan and you want to have a meeting with

all Teacher's and Staff who is in contact with your child. If you need more

help please feel free to ask.

Document all Appointments, Keep PT and OT papers as if the School wants

you to back up the missed days you will be able to show the missed days were

accounted for due to Medical issues. Which is exempt. Another reason to get a

504 plan started NOW. At least for the Diagnosing stage of this.

would miss 40 days of School. I had Documents to back me up as

they claimed they would hold back if she missed any more days. I

researched School Policy and since was a A and B student and passed all

test's the School could not hold her back due to missed days. I got her on the

504 plan and this sure helped out ALOT. All missed days were excused due to

Medical and Physical issues.

Robbin

**************Start the year off right. Easy ways to stay in shape.

http://body.aol.com/fitness/winter-exercise?NCID=aolcmp00300000002489

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