Guest guest Posted July 9, 2005 Report Share Posted July 9, 2005 Hi everyone, I'm taking a class in my master's program (in education, secondary), and it's a general intro to Special Education. I happened to mention tonight that Ian had that dual diagnosis, which the professor had never heard of before (though he believes it is possible and wants to learn more about it). I have a research presentation to do with a partner, and we've been allowed to present the dual diagnosis -- an overview of Down syndrome, of course, and then how the autism changes things. And so I come here to the experts. Joan -- is it possible to get a)a single copy of each of the newsletters that have been published, and b)30 copies of the first newsletter, the general introduction to the dual diagnosis? I am willing to pay for them, but I'd have to have them in hand soon. Is this at all possible? I'm also willing to print them and copy them, if that's allowable. Everyone -- would you be willing to write a couple of paragraphs about what it's like to parent a child with this dual diagnosis? What the behaviors are, how they differ from " just " Down syndrome, how do you feel approaching school districts and CSEs about getting services, perhaps even some words about the good and bad experiences you've had with teachers -- really, pretty much anything and everything you are willing to share. Send them to me at ckc@..., to avoid clogging up this list. If you'd like me to change your child's name, I will do so, although to these people, the real name would make the same difference. I am kind of excited about this -- here's my chance to get to a classroom full of teachers who may have one of our kids in his or her classroom, to explain the real stuff that you can't find in textbooks. I've already spoken up tonight, when one of my classmates talked about parents in denial and overbearing parents. I explained what it is like to have a child with a disability -- how teachers may come and go, but parents are forever; how it feels to be judged and assessed from the moment you access special services; how it is to sit before a committee with your hat in your hands, and beg for things for our children that other children get without question. I am also thinking of bringing Ian into class one day -- perhaps even for this presentation -- that he becomes more than a name on a page or a representative of a syndrome. What do you think of that? Is it asking him to be a performing monkey, do you think? Thanks for your attention, folks. Hope all is well with you and yours. CK, Mom to Ian (2/89), (9/90), and Rose (6/94) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 10, 2005 Report Share Posted July 10, 2005 Hi CK, Masters!!! Good for you. I often use Zeb for training purposes. I do not feel I am using him as a monkey. Any learning opportunities for professionals will only benefit other children. Charlyne Mom to Zeb 12 DS/OCD/ASD? CK wrote: Hi everyone, I'm taking a class in my master's program (in education, secondary), and it's a general intro to Special Education. I happened to mention tonight that Ian had that dual diagnosis, which the professor had never heard of before (though he believes it is possible and wants to learn more about it). I have a research presentation to do with a partner, and we've been allowed to present the dual diagnosis -- an overview of Down syndrome, of course, and then how the autism changes things. And so I come here to the experts. Joan -- is it possible to get a)a single copy of each of the newsletters that have been published, and b)30 copies of the first newsletter, the general introduction to the dual diagnosis? I am willing to pay for them, but I'd have to have them in hand soon. Is this at all possible? I'm also willing to print them and copy them, if that's allowable. Everyone -- would you be willing to write a couple of paragraphs about what it's like to parent a child with this dual diagnosis? What the behaviors are, how they differ from " just " Down syndrome, how do you feel approaching school districts and CSEs about getting services, perhaps even some words about the good and bad experiences you've had with teachers -- really, pretty much anything and everything you are willing to share. Send them to me at ckc@..., to avoid clogging up this list. If you'd like me to change your child's name, I will do so, although to these people, the real name would make the same difference. I am kind of excited about this -- here's my chance to get to a classroom full of teachers who may have one of our kids in his or her classroom, to explain the real stuff that you can't find in textbooks. I've already spoken up tonight, when one of my classmates talked about parents in denial and overbearing parents. I explained what it is like to have a child with a disability -- how teachers may come and go, but parents are forever; how it feels to be judged and assessed from the moment you access special services; how it is to sit before a committee with your hat in your hands, and beg for things for our children that other children get without question. I am also thinking of bringing Ian into class one day -- perhaps even for this presentation -- that he becomes more than a name on a page or a representative of a syndrome. What do you think of that? Is it asking him to be a performing monkey, do you think? Thanks for your attention, folks. Hope all is well with you and yours. CK, Mom to Ian (2/89), (9/90), and Rose (6/94) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 11, 2005 Report Share Posted July 11, 2005 In a message dated 7/10/2005 2:56:28 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, charlyne1121@... writes: Hi CK, Masters!!! Good for you. I often use Zeb for training purposes. I do not feel I am using him as a monkey. Any learning opportunities for professionals will only benefit other children. Charlyne Mom to Zeb 12 DS/OCD/ASD? DITTO CK. I'll write to you privately so you can use it for your project. Donna 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.