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Crossing the street

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Thank you so much, Shoshana! I love reading your posts and you've been quite

helpful. I will inquire about outside help with this, as you suggested. You

know, I try to imagine 's adult life and it really scares me. I cannot

imagine my life without him living under my roof, but then again, maybe this

is not what will want. I always cop out of these thoughts by saying to

myself, " I'll cross that bridge when I get to it " , but as the years fly by, I

see that bridge getting closer and closer, and not being so far off in the

distance. I love the posts from parents of older children. It gives me hope

and quells my fears. Thank you!

Jackie, Mom to 14ds, 11, and Bradley 7

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When we think about the typical process of learning to cross the street, we

realise that it doesn't happen in 'a lesson', or even a series of 'lessons'.

When our children are young, we carry them (or ride them in strollers).

Get to the corner. Stop, look, listen. Wait while traffic moves by. Cross

in one movement. At first, the child just _feels_ the pattern.

Then the child is walking with us. Get to the corner, holding hands. Stop,

look, listen. Talk about stopping, looking, listening. Feel the pattern.

Begin to build language around the pattern. We're safe because we're

together. We're safe because we stop...

Later, the child is walking with us. Get to the corner, no longer holding

hands. Maybe a touch on the shoulder. Talk about how we judge how fast an

approaching car is moving, how soon it will cross our path. We create

safety together.

Later, " You tell me when it's safe to cross " . And so on.

How do we get to Carnegie Hall? Practice!

It's a long process, and it involves a lot of attention on the part of the

parent / care-giver. When are we ready to take the next tiny step? When do

we need to back-track? We don't skip ahead eight steps based on some

abstract notion of 'independence'. And we provide company - companionship -

as long as someone needs it.

When a child has difficulty learning (needs more teaching power), we 'crank

up' the process. More attention. More practice. Fine-grained attention --

remembering the process in even more detail, making our own role less

'automatic'. Sometimes we engage other companions, other teachers.

My point? It's not a mystery. It's not something we start after a

'transition IEP'. We start thinking about the balance between providing

companionship / protection and stretching the boundaries _early in the

game_.

Here's a guess ... it's just possible that one way to reduce 'impulsiveness'

is to increase _engagement_. If the child feels that it's truly good for us

to be together, to do things together, then the 'impulse' to do something

can be expressed in companionship. We learn _together_ to experience

attraction (a store window, the swings, whatever is across the street) and

invite our companion to share that experience. The impulse can become an

impulse to communicate, converse, negotiate, move together, enjoy together,

rather than to break and run.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Meridith wrote (on the Our-Kids list): I also really like the Hawaii Early

Learning Profile (HELP) books...

I responded:

I _love_ the HELP books. Basically, they take a fine-grained look at normal

development, and then ask the question, " What would we need to do to

strengthen / support / encourage that specific development " .

What sold me was running into one particular item (I think it was part of a

group of actions related either to communication or social engagement):

Child Squeals with Delight

The instruction for strengthening / supporting / encouraging that element

began with:

1) Delight the child.

What appeals to me is that the entire process of development is expressed in

normative terms. The underlying message is that there is a lot we can do to

encourage and support our child's development. The way to think about this

is to pay attention to the normal process of strengthening / supporting /

encouraging and 'crank it up' a bit (or even quite a bit).

The HELP books also blow away the myth of some kind of unitary

'developmental level' that describes a child's current state or that

predicts the child's ultimate state.

Good stuff.

Dave Wetherow

Vancouver Island

http://www.communityworks.info

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SHOSHI8@... wrote:

I approached the local agencies to help fund someone to facilitate Tom

learning to cross streets...............the funds became

available.......this individual took Tom out 2-3 times a week and Tom

learned to cross the streets.......

What a great idea! I think I'll ask private therapy to work on this. We go to

a medical office building where the traffic is horrendous. Bridget is so

unaware of it. She is too busy looking for someone to say " Hi " or " See you

soon " to... LOL

mom to Bridget 8 ds

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

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In a message dated 1/6/02 4:48:17 PM Pacific Standard Time, lisa@...

writes:

> > And they call our kids " retarded " ...........??????? sometimes, I think

> > the problem is not their heads, but ours...............

>

I think a lot of us underestimate the power and potential of our kids

sometimes! Just when you think you've got them down pat, they do something

to amaze us!

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ROFLMAO...I can relate to this.....I am sure some people think I am the retarded

one, and not BJ at times........and I

just love it when I do something stupid at home, and I get " that " look from

- you know the one that says " and

they say that I am retarded? " hehehehehe must be a blonde thing :)

>

>

> And they call our kids " retarded " ...........??????? sometimes, I think

> the problem is not their heads, but ours...............

--

Leis

Mum to BJ 4 (19th Nov) and Jellybean due early Feb 2002

ICQ# 8168619

" Wise men never sit and wail their loss, but cheerily seek how to redress their

harms. "

Henry the Sixth-Part Three 5 iv

Shakespeare

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In a message dated 1/6/02 6:48:13 PM Central Standard Time, lisa@...

writes:

> one, and not BJ at times........and I

> just love it when I do something stupid at home, and I get " that " look from

> - you know the one that says " and

> they say that I am retarded? " hehehehehe must be a blonde thing :)

>

> I don't know, I'm not blonde. thinks it's hilarious when I do

> something dumb. Especially when I'm not trying to be funny.

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  • 9 years later...

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