Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 Hello everyone, My son has been receiving speech therapy in the public schools even though he is otherwise homeschooled. At the last 504 meeting with the school (which was just a routine meeting to sign papers for speech), I made a comment as we were leaving the meeting about my son not being easy to teach because of his memory and attention issues. Don't ask me why I said it, because I have no clue, except that it fit in with the conversation at the time. I ENJOY teaching him very much, but I've learned that we have to spend more time on review than we do in learning new stuff. He forgets sight words, addition facts, how to count by two's, phonic skills, etc. just a couple of weeks after we move on to new stuff, unless we continue to review the old material over and over. He might see a sight word that he has read over a couple of hundred times before, but if it hasn't been reviewed for a month, it'll be as if he's never seen it before in his life. THAT'S what makes teaching him difficult. Well, that plus he doesn't have a good attention span unless he's doing something exciting to him, so I make as much of his " work " seem like play as I can! (Today, for example, I made a long road out of sight word cards. After he walked down the road reading them, he was able to drive his remote control car along the path! He loved it, and the words got practiced too!) Oh, and he has trouble applying stuff he's learned as well. For example, in reading, he can read many words in isolation (using phonic skills or sometimes simply as sight words), but moments later have trouble with those same words when they are in a story he's reading. (I've recently begun a new approach which I think is helping a lot with that, but I won't take time to explain it now.) He can even spell some words (using phonics skills) with letter tiles, but have trouble reading his own list ten minutes later. Also, his speech teacher has noticed that he has more trouble than most kids with making use, in regular conversation, of new speech sounds he's learned, even though he can say them perfectly in words in speech class. She says he doesn't monitor his own everyday converstion and just continues saying the words incorrectly as he's been doing since he first learned how to talk. I guess old habits are hard to break! Well, anyway, the school picked up on my comment the other day, and so the speech teacher, whom I think highly of, arranged another meeting for the school officials (including herself) to discuss it with me and possibly set up testing. I was told that they would test/evaluate my son (by the OT, and the school psychologist, and possibly by the resource teacher as well) even though he was homeschooled, and that then the group would come up with a " plan " of what they would offer him, but...here's the catch... the speech therapist said that most likely none of it would be able to be put into action unless he was put back in public schools. I don't intend to put him back in public schools this year, and probably not next year either (I'll decide that closer to next year.), so I don't see much point in allowing them to put my son through all thoses tests, until such time as I decide to put him back in public school. The speech teacher has assured me that the ball is in my hands, and that I can simply deny testing if I choose...yet even though I feel I can trust HER, I'm not so sure of the school's intentions regarding this meeting. (I'm a former public school teacher myself, and back during my P.S. years I, myself, might have been suspicious about a child who was homeschooled but whom had some learning problems, and tried to convince the parent to put him back in PS too! But now, on the contrary, I feel I offer my child much MORE than he previously got in PS!) In all honesty, I'm a bit nervous about the meeting, in case you hadn't already guessed! lol The meeting is this Friday, by the way. I don't intend to tell them all my son's learning related problems, as I don't want them to get the school on my case and have them try to convince me to put my son back in P.S. I really don't feel as if the ball is in my hands even if the speech therapist says it is. Instead I feel as if they are trying to pull the rug out from under me! Does anyone have any suggestions or advice for me in dealing with the schools? Has anyone had any luck in getting the schools to offer OT to their homeschooled child? My son has a lot of upper body hypotonia which does interfer with his schoolwork and his speech...but even when he was in public school, and I had a note from his pediatrician requesting that the school evaluate him for OT, they wouldn't do it!!!! So that's about the only thing I'd really like the school to help with....yet I just don't see getting the service as a homeschooler. I'd appreciate any hints or suggestions anyone has for me regarding the meeting, OT, learning disabilities, etc! :-) On the positive side of things, the whole process IS a learning and inner healing experience for both my son and me! :-) I have learned to tailor my teaching/interacting around his needs and learning styles, instead of trying to force him into a rigid mold. His problems are opportunities for my growth and learning, as well as his! And I think that I'm learning more and more about how to teach him, as an individual, all the time. ....But will the school believe me??? 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