Guest guest Posted June 3, 2010 Report Share Posted June 3, 2010 The only time we completely blind-sided a program (not by intention) was when Jan was 5 and attending a Montessori school. That program was totally inclusive and had no supports other than the head teacher welcomed the opportunity to have Jan in the program. The second year there, her brother attended the session for younger kids. One day, when picking the kids up, I noticed that another Mom posted a note looking for someone to car pool with to an after-school program in kid gymnastics (Tumblebugs which was very early in kid gymnastics), so I signed my two kids up. On the first day, both the other Mom and I showed up. They had NO introductions. The kids sat down in a circle and the instructor simply told the parents to come back in an hour. I didn't even get to tell him that Jan didn't talk very well. It went on this way for several weeks but one day I met the instructor in the hall and he gave me his philosophy which was " develop the body and the mind will follow " . As a kid who grew up as a nerd, this was a new concept to me, but it certainly was right for Jan. She learned the basic skills like forward rolls and being comfortable on a high balance beam that simply gave her good gross motor control, so that wasn't an issue that took much attention when she was trying to learn other things. In general, she was " just a kid " in the neighborhood. She played with the girls in the houses on both sides who were a year or so younger and was in the " club " when the kids self organized one. She was in lots of inclusive programs, but a few of them overtly rejected her, even though she functioned well without much accommodation. In particular, she was asked to leave Girl Scouts when a new Mom became leader. She was also asked to leave a YMCA gymnastics team training program by one of the YMCA staff. They recanted that one almost immediately, but we didn't put her back in the program. I also moved my S.O gymnastics program from that YMCA to commercial gyms where I never had trouble being allowed to use their (much better) facilities. Our attitude was always that Jan was our gift to activities. If you don't want her, you can't have her ... and it is your loss. A few years ago when I enrolled Jan in the Leukemia Society Hike for Discovery, they knew she had DS, but they were not prepared to offer much accommodation. In the end her Mom or I attended and took part in most of the many training sessions and we both went with her on the hike. The real turning point on her acceptance was a very wet and muddy training hike. It was actually longer and harder than the hike in the Grand Canyon. The team leaders hung back with Jan who was slowest. When we were about a half mile from the end and the hike leveled out, Jan broke into a jog. I think of that whole experience as " sensitivity training " for the Leukemia Society. Someday soon, we will go back and do another hike with them. As a leukemia survivor, I feel she owes it to help raise money for research. Besides, it was a great experience for all. Rick p.s. I don't think it matters if you tell them your child has DS. It is whether they accept your child as she is into a program which doesn't have any other special needs kids but which accepts her as a participant without fuss. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.