Guest guest Posted September 10, 2009 Report Share Posted September 10, 2009 I would try to find an advocate or special education lawyer to help you get him classifed. There is no reason with a DX not to give you a 504. And these kids need IEP's I think to keep the services in place. They benefit from having a relationship with a school counselor and they benefit from social skill classes. I had to have a lawyer attend meetings with me. She was friendly and matter of fact about what they needed to provide. She also knew the county level school lawyer and instructed our district on what is allowed. It opened doors. Good luck, Pam communictt took me 4 years to it took meoll tasseeis > > My son did great the first day, not so great yesterday and who knows today. He says now that he hates 1st grade, the days are too long, etc He acts out at home but i give him his melatonin a little early and so far it has helped ( haven't increased the risperdal yet). > > Tomorrow I have a meeting with the school. They refuse to do a 504 or IEP. His therapist is on vacation and I didn't know when the meeting was till yesterday. So I will be tackling this alone. One thing that needs to be changed is my son needs lots of bathroom breaks and drinks due to meds plus his sensory integration disorder ( he doesn't know he needs to go until he REALLY needs to go). Yesterday he said the teacher wouldn't let him go when he needed to( I have no idea what really happened). I will get a docs statement if it comes to that htough. any suggestions for going into this meeting alone and not knowing what to do? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 10, 2009 Report Share Posted September 10, 2009 By law, you have a right to have notice of meetings ahead of time. You can go to the meeting or you can call them and tell them that you need more time to prepare yourself and that you'd like to bring some professional opinion and info for them. Tell them you can't possibly do this with a day's notice. Meanwhile, you can ask them for a copy of the parental rights brochure (or look it up online) as well as the procedural guidelines for special education. That will let them know that you mean business and you intend for things to be conducted properly. Don't let them try to push it under the rug. Sorry - I just get so uptight about these things after what I've dealt with and what I've heard other parents dealing with. Ceckout www.wrightslaw.com and ldonline.org to help you prepare. Remember that you can call a meeting as much as you feel is necessary, but the time and date must be mutually agreed upon. Best, Bonnie > > My son did great the first day, not so great yesterday and who knows today. He says now that he hates 1st grade, the days are too long, etc He acts out at home but i give him his melatonin a little early and so far it has helped ( haven't increased the risperdal yet). > > Tomorrow I have a meeting with the school. They refuse to do a 504 or IEP. His therapist is on vacation and I didn't know when the meeting was till yesterday. So I will be tackling this alone. One thing that needs to be changed is my son needs lots of bathroom breaks and drinks due to meds plus his sensory integration disorder ( he doesn't know he needs to go until he REALLY needs to go). Yesterday he said the teacher wouldn't let him go when he needed to( I have no idea what really happened). I will get a docs statement if it comes to that htough. any suggestions for going into this meeting alone and not knowing what to do? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 10, 2009 Report Share Posted September 10, 2009 Hi , I hope today went better for your son. So I assume the school feels he's doing okay there and that's why they feel he doesn't need either Plan. From that perspective, at the meeting I would explain to them about his OCD, how it affects him at home and that you're concerned his OC behaviors will interfere with school, for them to watch out for those behaviors and to let you know ANYthing they notice; and also tell them how you feel it would be best for them to respond to keep his anxiety/behavior calm if his OCD does bother him at school. Let them know he said he hates 1st grade, that the days are long. Do get that doctor's statement regarding bathroom breaks and drinks; mention his need for them and that you plan to get the statement to give to them. Who diagnosed the SID? Tell them about his sensory issues, how they might affect him in class, at lunch, recess, his behavior, ability to do his work.... Ask about possible occupational therapy at the school to help with the sensory issues. If they seem to brush off the SID, tell them you would like the school to do an OT evaluation. (if the school wasn't the place that tested him in the past) Ask the teacher(s) if she has any thoughts, noticed anything these first few days. Always ask them at the meeting for any suggestions too. You might ask them first, before you make any of your own. Like when talking about his OC behaviors and concerns they will bother him at school, ask them how they feel it should be handled, then add your thoughts on the best way; or regarding sensory issues, ask if they have any other students that are similar and how do they handle it, then add your thoughts. I just found it went better at my meetings if I solicited their ideas first. (And then sometimes I had no clue as to what I felt they should do and really needed some ideas!) Well, just some very quick thoughts. Good luck at the meeting and do update us. They may deny a Plan right now but give it more time for them to see how he does. Oh - anything from last year you can bring up with problems he had? Mention those and suggest talking to last year's teacher for ideas/thoughts on how to support your son this year. -- In , " shellspace71 " wrote: > > My son did great the first day, not so great yesterday and who knows today. He says now that he hates 1st grade, the days are too long, etc He acts out at home but i give him his melatonin a little Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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