Guest guest Posted November 14, 2003 Report Share Posted November 14, 2003 Hi All, well as Noah is approaching 3 insurance is wanting the school to take over his therapy. They offer a whopping 15 min each of ot and pt and I may be able to get 30-60 min of speech. We were trying for a home program of a.b.a that insurance would pay for which was to start this month but due to loose ends we decided to wait until Jan since we have to pay upfront and seek reimbursement later. So now we need a letter from the school as the public official stating Noah is not getting a.b.a at school. So Of course we have to enroll him to get services. The school is working on an I.E.P and informed me yesterday of his placement into the serverly disabled class which has 8 kids a teacher and 1 LPN. They state that he lacks the components for the autism program meaning he is multihandicapped due to duel dx and minimal hearing loss in 1 ear and the fact he has mild nystagmus which at this time he interacts fine in the environment. He was assessed by the vision and mobility teacher for the dist 6 month ago and she said he does not qualify for services with them because his vision does not effect his mobility.They want the i.e.p on the 21 of Nov . Has anyone else had problems in securing treatment for the autism? I will for NOT put Noah in this class as it is the most restrictive class available. At this point Ik will attend the scheduled meeting but let my objections be known as to the placement. and not sign the I.E.P I will request in writing why they will not put him in the autism class request another meeting in April for placement next year with a full team. They made this placement without my presence in a meeting. I will get doc notes and request for the therapy and by that time we will be on the home program so Ik will have that as ammunition. Does anyone have some suggestions for me??? Thanks ladies Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 15, 2003 Report Share Posted November 15, 2003 In a message dated 11/14/2003 7:25:19 AM Eastern Standard Time, rwgreene@... writes: > They made this placement without my presence in a meeting. Hi , Were you invited to this meeting? If you were and the school made tried to rescheduled the meeting so that you could attend then the team could decide his placement without your being present. The school would have had to make reasonable accomodations for your presence, otherwise, it is against the law. Noah's placement has to fiit his needs not Noah fit into a school program. It's a battle getting the right accomodations for any child but typically more difficult with an autism program. If you do your homework and have all your evaluations in place prior to the meeting your outcome will be successful. Good luck Charlyne Mom to Zeb 10 DS/OCD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 15, 2003 Report Share Posted November 15, 2003 Hi , It is against the law to for a PPT team to predetermine placement. An I.Q. test does not soley determine what an individual is capable of. Boy, did they flam you. I can't remember how old Noah is. I would be writing my state complaint very quickly or asking for a mediation hearing. I hate the fact that we have to fight for everything that our children are entitled too by law but that's the way it seems to be. Many districts hope that if they give parents a hard time they will give up saving the district money. Do what you have too and don't be discouraged. Charlyne Mom to Zeb 10 DS/OCD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 15, 2003 Report Share Posted November 15, 2003 Charlene, yes I was intvited to this meeting it is to take place on Nov 21. They just took the liberty to pre-determine placement on their own. I called and brought to their attention information that they did not have as far as functional and developmental areas of Noah's assessments and they called back and said the decision stands! So I have put my concerns in writing to document the phone call and will send them off on Monday. The meeting was supposed to also address related services and they will only offer him speech. The school psychologist states he lacks the components for A.B.A because he has multiple disabilities. This was news to me because the vision assessment I had done in may clearly states his vision does not interfere with what he is doing on a daily basis. Also where they said he is hearing impaired well my assessment states he has a slight high frequency loss in the left ear and in the right ear hearing is with in normal limits and inconclusion the results are consistent with essentially normal hearing. Then she said his i.q is too low to do a.b.a so I said as you know Noah has scattered skills which are significant and the baley scales of infant dev performed on Noah was incomplete that day and also it was noted in those notes they obtained was the fact that Noah was sleepy during the session. Therefore I do not feel this is a valid estimate of Noah's intelligence. I also wrote that I felt that the interpretation of some of Noah's behaviors indicate a lack of understanding of autism. so I will decline the whole school smorgishboard what they are offering . She said next year they will put him in the same class. So I am preparing now for next falls placement. In January I am going to request a functional, play -based and ecological assessment be done in Noah's customary environment, his HOME!!!!!!!!!!! and then say we will meet in 20 days to discuss the results for his next I.EP for fall services. By then I will have the a.b.a.going in the home more private assessments and more time to prepare for this process. These people are really sick that's about all I have to say about them. Well thanks for resounding to me Charlene I will keep you posted on how it turns out. --- Original Message ----- From: charlyne1121@... To: Sent: Saturday, November 15, 2003 11:58 AM Subject: Re: Noah Update In a message dated 11/14/2003 7:25:19 AM Eastern Standard Time, rwgreene@... writes: > They made this placement without my presence in a meeting. Hi , Were you invited to this meeting? If you were and the school made tried to rescheduled the meeting so that you could attend then the team could decide his placement without your being present. The school would have had to make reasonable accomodations for your presence, otherwise, it is against the law. Noah's placement has to fiit his needs not Noah fit into a school program. It's a battle getting the right accomodations for any child but typically more difficult with an autism program. If you do your homework and have all your evaluations in place prior to the meeting your outcome will be successful. Good luck Charlyne Mom to Zeb 10 DS/OCD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 16, 2003 Report Share Posted November 16, 2003 Hi , Your on the right track. You have years of advocating to do for Noah and you are certainly beginning well informed. Regardless if you place Noah in a home program the school district is responsible for his education and related services. You are fortunate that the insurance will continue to pay after Noah's third birthday. I bet you get the eyerolls,LOL. Charlyne Mom to Zeb 10 DS/OCD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 16, 2003 Report Share Posted November 16, 2003 In a message dated 11/16/03 3:09:12 AM Central Standard Time, writes: > Then she said his i.q is too low to do a.b.a so I said as you know Noah has > scattered skills which are significant and the baley scales of infant dev > performed on Noah was incomplete that day and also it was noted in those notes > they obtained was the fact that Noah was sleepy during the session. > Therefore I do not feel this is a valid estimate of Noah's intelligence. I also > wrote that I felt that the interpretation of some of Noah's behaviors indicate a > lack of understanding of autism. , I have been following this thread and haven't had time to respond. But, this IQ garbage just makes my blood boil. For a child who doesn't have appropriate motor planning ability (i.e. effective, reliable pointing) and lack of an organized communication system (sign or PECS) I don't feel there is a valid test yet developed to measure their intelligence. An IQ test is only a test of how someone can communicate their intelligence. Good luck in your fight Karyn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 16, 2003 Report Share Posted November 16, 2003 Charlyne, Noah will turn 3 on Nov 22. The autism program has from ages 3-6 in that class and there is 8 kids in there as of today. If Noah was to go in that class they would have to hire another person. I anticipated this kind of garbage from the dist. with his birthday being so far into the year and the budget at so a late date would all play into this. That is why I was just going to pursue other avenues. For now it is not so vital only because my insurance is going to assist with getting me started on a home program which in Noah's case it is the best solution. By getting my ducks in a row for next year, August in this state, I will try too get the dist. to either supply him with a home tutor or put him in that program or create a place for him that he is getting the related services he is entitled to. On the flip side of this I know their strategy now but they don't know mine. The more supports I have to prove my case for a mediation hearing the better, as of today I probably would not have enough info to support his need for A.B.A by April at the next i.e.p I am going to request then I should have a stronger argument. Also and if they won't place him in the program I will have studied every case and book I can get my hands on to properly fill out an I.E.P. I just bought win-win I.E.P for students with autism by Fouse. That has some good info about DETAILS. and of course armed with my slaw book they will see they picked the wrong parent to try to save money on. Don't know how far I will get but it for sure is not going to be the lowest possible placement they have offered with only speech as a related service.. Thanks for listening. Re: Noah Update Hi , It is against the law to for a PPT team to predetermine placement. An I.Q. test does not soley determine what an individual is capable of. Boy, did they flam you. I can't remember how old Noah is. I would be writing my state complaint very quickly or asking for a mediation hearing. I hate the fact that we have to fight for everything that our children are entitled too by law but that's the way it seems to be. Many districts hope that if they give parents a hard time they will give up saving the district money. Do what you have too and don't be discouraged. Charlyne Mom to Zeb 10 DS/OCD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 16, 2003 Report Share Posted November 16, 2003 Hi , ABA or behavior therapy has little to do with merely correcting behavior. It entails a comprehensive program for teaching skills across all domains, from the linguistic, to the cognitive, to the social, to the mundane tasks of getting dressed, brushing one's teeth, and so on. Ok, you may know this but it seems that the team are finding excuses or are they clueless for mentioning an IQ level and does not need the service. Many like me, our opinion the sooner the better. ABA is about shaping behaviors by taking baby steps. It isn't just about submission or compliance. It is about forming habits and motivating the appearance of appropriate behaviors. This takes time. It is the formation of habit through repetition and reinforcement that truly changes behavior on the long term. Noah receiving intensive early behaviorial intervention would benefit from it and I've seen many his age that their behavior have decreased due to being taught to learn. Like my son have shown improvement with his communication, play, instruction-following, self-help, and his tantrums have decreased some. Not a recovery but a relief to understand he can learn some. Some of the words I had written from the first paragraph were from the book I'm reading Behavioral Intervention for Young Children with Autism by Maurice. Its a manual for parents and professionals. I would suggest for you to check it out it will give you great ammo towards this service implemented on the IEP. It is great that your insurance will pay for ABA. Lets see what you could get out of the school district in the mean time. Chapter 15 mentions-What parents Can Expect from Public School Programs. Chapter Seventeen: Answers to Commonly Asked Questions: Q: What is the Optimal Age for Starting Intensive Behavioral Therapy? A: A considerate amount of evidence shows that the greatest gains are made with children who start training prior to their fifth birthday. Many of us suspect that the optimal date for starting most children is between 24 and 42 months, but we do not have sufficient research evidence to confirm that. Behavioral intervention have been shown to be effective for all individuals with autism, regardless of age. The gains made with the children starting at later ages, however, appear to decrease in accirdance with ages. There is also a dearth of data related to starting children too early. Autism, compared to other disabilities that are evident a birth or soon after, ususally emerges and is identified rather late. Therefore, treatment would be unlikely to start prior to about 20 months. Whivh state are you in? Get a lot of research together supporting your request. Have a plan ready on how they can do it, either they haven't done it or seem like they wouldn't know how to do it but maybe are receptive. Be very concrete, so you can address every objection they raise: 1) We don't have anyone trained to set up a program in that Answer: Provide a list of consultants they could use (preferably at the top would be the one you use in a home program). 2) We don't have a TA or parapro trained in that. Answer: Send them someone from your home program to hire if possible, or at least offer to help train one they hire (not ideal, but better than not getting it). 3) We don't have anywhere to do it. Answer: Be very flexible. This is from a mom who had shared this info from another list had the ABA in a large closet one year. Not great but at least the school paid for it. Just in general, keep offering to help, to problem solve, to find solutions. You should be prepared to help them find materials or even provide them yourself. It's best to have a cooperative attitude as long as you can, with some give and take. Many times they see if you are willing to help or give on a few things what you want is for the good of the kid, not just to be a pest. Good luck when you pull the research together on ABA and how it is the only effective method to teach children with autism of (as far as empirical evidence). There are hundreds of articles, but good ones include the 2 Lovaas studies (1987 & the follow-up in 1993 with McEachin, et al), the report from the National Research Council on Autism, they convened a committee with national experts and came up with the conclusion that kids need at least 25 hours per week year round intensive educational services. Also, the Surgeon General has also mentioned ABA as an effective treatment for autism. Continue to follow your gut instincts. Irma,15,DS/ASD http://www.mariposaschool.org/programs/TrainingManual.doc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2003 Report Share Posted November 18, 2003 ALL I HAVE TO SAY IS AMEN TO THAT , KAREN I AGREE 100%, THOSE IQ TESTS SUCK!! SORRY TO BE SO BLUNT !! VI Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 19, 2003 Report Share Posted November 19, 2003 Hi Irma, thank you for taking the time to write a very informative post. I thought about it and am having the doc write a prescription for 10 hours a week of A.B.A integrated with sensory therapy in the school as a related service. My insurance only will pay for the supervision of the program not the actual line therapy, we have to find the individuals and pay them ourselves. So 10 hours would be 10 hours less I have to pay someone in the home. I will see where that gets me. What do you think? Thanks Re: Noah update Hi , ABA or behavior therapy has little to do with merely correcting behavior. It entails a comprehensive program for teaching skills across all domains, from the linguistic, to the cognitive, to the social, to the mundane tasks of getting dressed, brushing one's teeth, and so on. Ok, you may know this but it seems that the team are finding excuses or are they clueless for mentioning an IQ level and does not need the service. Many like me, our opinion the sooner the better. ABA is about shaping behaviors by taking baby steps. It isn't just about submission or compliance. It is about forming habits and motivating the appearance of appropriate behaviors. This takes time. It is the formation of habit through repetition and reinforcement that truly changes behavior on the long term. Noah receiving intensive early behaviorial intervention would benefit from it and I've seen many his age that their behavior have decreased due to being taught to learn. Like my son have shown improvement with his communication, play, instruction-following, self-help, and his tantrums have decreased some. Not a recovery but a relief to understand he can learn some. Some of the words I had written from the first paragraph were from the book I'm reading Behavioral Intervention for Young Children with Autism by Maurice. Its a manual for parents and professionals. I would suggest for you to check it out it will give you great ammo towards this service implemented on the IEP. It is great that your insurance will pay for ABA. Lets see what you could get out of the school district in the mean time. Chapter 15 mentions-What parents Can Expect from Public School Programs. Chapter Seventeen: Answers to Commonly Asked Questions: Q: What is the Optimal Age for Starting Intensive Behavioral Therapy? A: A considerate amount of evidence shows that the greatest gains are made with children who start training prior to their fifth birthday. Many of us suspect that the optimal date for starting most children is between 24 and 42 months, but we do not have sufficient research evidence to confirm that. Behavioral intervention have been shown to be effective for all individuals with autism, regardless of age. The gains made with the children starting at later ages, however, appear to decrease in accirdance with ages. There is also a dearth of data related to starting children too early. Autism, compared to other disabilities that are evident a birth or soon after, ususally emerges and is identified rather late. Therefore, treatment would be unlikely to start prior to about 20 months. Whivh state are you in? Get a lot of research together supporting your request. Have a plan ready on how they can do it, either they haven't done it or seem like they wouldn't know how to do it but maybe are receptive. Be very concrete, so you can address every objection they raise: 1) We don't have anyone trained to set up a program in that Answer: Provide a list of consultants they could use (preferably at the top would be the one you use in a home program). 2) We don't have a TA or parapro trained in that. Answer: Send them someone from your home program to hire if possible, or at least offer to help train one they hire (not ideal, but better than not getting it). 3) We don't have anywhere to do it. Answer: Be very flexible. This is from a mom who had shared this info from another list had the ABA in a large closet one year. Not great but at least the school paid for it. Just in general, keep offering to help, to problem solve, to find solutions. You should be prepared to help them find materials or even provide them yourself. It's best to have a cooperative attitude as long as you can, with some give and take. Many times they see if you are willing to help or give on a few things what you want is for the good of the kid, not just to be a pest. Good luck when you pull the research together on ABA and how it is the only effective method to teach children with autism of (as far as empirical evidence). There are hundreds of articles, but good ones include the 2 Lovaas studies (1987 & the follow-up in 1993 with McEachin, et al), the report from the National Research Council on Autism, they convened a committee with national experts and came up with the conclusion that kids need at least 25 hours per week year round intensive educational services. Also, the Surgeon General has also mentioned ABA as an effective treatment for autism. Continue to follow your gut instincts. Irma,15,DS/ASD http://www.mariposaschool.org/programs/TrainingManual.doc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 20, 2003 Report Share Posted November 20, 2003 Hi , Glad to hear on the steps you have lined up. This will do for now. As long as you have that doctor's RX and you have a certified or qualified person trained in this field, the hours are a good start. Do you know of someone trained in this area? Let me know where you live so that if I had run across anyone that have mentioned looking for a family who needs this type of service I could let you know if its yea or a nay. Remember its not so much what you want for your son its what he needs and that will give you the power towards the related service you would like to address. Early Behavior Intervention has been a great service especially for most kids with developmental delay. ABA works to extinguish these behaviors. If the child cannot sit, that's where ABA begins. Whether a child can attend or not, ABA makes contact, begins at the basics of learning and takes data. Jot down a list of what you would like to address. The therapist will guide you with the goals after an eval has been done. I'm sharing a website where the center my son attends. www.treehousepediatrics.com Treehouse Pediatric Center: Sensory Integration and Behavior Therapy. At www.difflearn.com Different Roads to Learning an ABA Catalog has a great list of materials used for home and center based ABA programs. The price is pretty reasonable too on the books as I've done some homework on it these past days. Example the Behavioral Intervention for Young Children with Autism retail price is $65.00, I've checked elsewhere and most of the used books are sold at $45.00, this catalog has the new book for $45.00. I searched on the internet same thing. Then there is the borrowing at your local library or at the school districts autism resource center if one is available. I was tempted on heading out to an Office Depot or Office Max to run copies but its about 400 pages and of course this could be a risky task, unless you have access to a copier. I'll have to purchase my own. Just a thought when wanting to purchase some books the catalog will give you an idea of what you would like to review first and then request to borrow one and see if this is what you would like to invest on. Good luck with this issue and hope to get an update on how things have turned out. Irma,15,Ds/ASD 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.