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<<I was told they

provide 2.5 hours a day of speech and language therapy to their

students. How ridiculous would it be to ask for the same? Grace

only goes to school for 2hrs, 45 minutes! Wouldn't it be great if I

walk out of the IEP meeting with a $24K check made out to the other

school? I can dream, right??>>

I am wondering if the oral school actually pulls out for that much speech per

day or is referring to the fact that their entire day is focused on speech and

language. Neal attended an auditory oral school for three years at a rate of

about $24,000 per year. Our district paid for that, plus reimbursed us for

mileage (it was 50 miles each way every day). They didn't hand us a check, but

they did place him there and set up a contract with the school. His speech pull

out there was 35 minutes per day, but definitely the entire day was about

learning language and correct speech, etc. I know kids can have success in a

variety of situations, but for Neal, the oral school was wonderful. In three

years he went from a kid with no spoken language at all, to a kid who almost

didn't qualify for services in mainstream Kindergarten because he had no

deficits in speech and language. Good luck at your meeting. If you really want

your child to attend the oral school, you may want to have someone from that

school at the meeting. It may be too late for that thought huh?

Rhonda Savage

Mom to Audrey, 8, hearing; and Neal, 6, CII at 2.9 years

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<<I was told they

provide 2.5 hours a day of speech and language therapy to their

students. How ridiculous would it be to ask for the same? Grace

only goes to school for 2hrs, 45 minutes! Wouldn't it be great if I

walk out of the IEP meeting with a $24K check made out to the other

school? I can dream, right??>>

I am wondering if the oral school actually pulls out for that much speech per

day or is referring to the fact that their entire day is focused on speech and

language. Neal attended an auditory oral school for three years at a rate of

about $24,000 per year. Our district paid for that, plus reimbursed us for

mileage (it was 50 miles each way every day). They didn't hand us a check, but

they did place him there and set up a contract with the school. His speech pull

out there was 35 minutes per day, but definitely the entire day was about

learning language and correct speech, etc. I know kids can have success in a

variety of situations, but for Neal, the oral school was wonderful. In three

years he went from a kid with no spoken language at all, to a kid who almost

didn't qualify for services in mainstream Kindergarten because he had no

deficits in speech and language. Good luck at your meeting. If you really want

your child to attend the oral school, you may want to have someone from that

school at the meeting. It may be too late for that thought huh?

Rhonda Savage

Mom to Audrey, 8, hearing; and Neal, 6, CII at 2.9 years

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<<I was told they

provide 2.5 hours a day of speech and language therapy to their

students. How ridiculous would it be to ask for the same? Grace

only goes to school for 2hrs, 45 minutes! Wouldn't it be great if I

walk out of the IEP meeting with a $24K check made out to the other

school? I can dream, right??>>

I am wondering if the oral school actually pulls out for that much speech per

day or is referring to the fact that their entire day is focused on speech and

language. Neal attended an auditory oral school for three years at a rate of

about $24,000 per year. Our district paid for that, plus reimbursed us for

mileage (it was 50 miles each way every day). They didn't hand us a check, but

they did place him there and set up a contract with the school. His speech pull

out there was 35 minutes per day, but definitely the entire day was about

learning language and correct speech, etc. I know kids can have success in a

variety of situations, but for Neal, the oral school was wonderful. In three

years he went from a kid with no spoken language at all, to a kid who almost

didn't qualify for services in mainstream Kindergarten because he had no

deficits in speech and language. Good luck at your meeting. If you really want

your child to attend the oral school, you may want to have someone from that

school at the meeting. It may be too late for that thought huh?

Rhonda Savage

Mom to Audrey, 8, hearing; and Neal, 6, CII at 2.9 years

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Rhonda, what a great story. That is exactly where I hope Grace is in

a few years. When I spoke to the director of the school, she made it

seem like they have one-to-one or two-to-one sessions of speech and

language in 30 minute increments for a total of 2.5 hours a day.

They're in school from 8:30-3:15 or so, with lunch and naptime (quiet

time) so maybe half their day is S & L and the other half is normal

preschool activites that revolve around language.

The school is about 10 miles from us so not too bad of a drive. I

really do love Grace's preschool that she's in now (great teacher,

resources, etc.) and would hate to move her but I do see the

importance of having Grace learn as quickly as possible now. Also,

she gets physical therapy at the preschool as well which she would

not get at the oral school. But we do still take her to private

physical therapy so we would just continue that as well.

This is all very interesting and I hope we can get what we need and

want with as little hassle as possible. My husband will be going to

the meeting with me but I am usually the talker in situations like

this. (He makes me negotiate car prices too because I don't back

down!)

Thanks for the great stories. I have lots of questions for the oral-

school now too.

Cherie

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<<Also,

she gets physical therapy at the preschool as well which she would

not get at the oral school. But we do still take her to private

physical therapy so we would just continue that as well. >>

Neal still received OT and APE locally through our district even though he was

placed at the oral school. He just left school early one day a week and we came

back here to meet individually with those therapists. So you don't necessarily

have to give up other services just because you are asking for placement in a

private setting.

Rhonda Savage

Mom to Audrey, 8, hearing; and Neal, 6, CII at 2.9 years

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<<Also,

she gets physical therapy at the preschool as well which she would

not get at the oral school. But we do still take her to private

physical therapy so we would just continue that as well. >>

Neal still received OT and APE locally through our district even though he was

placed at the oral school. He just left school early one day a week and we came

back here to meet individually with those therapists. So you don't necessarily

have to give up other services just because you are asking for placement in a

private setting.

Rhonda Savage

Mom to Audrey, 8, hearing; and Neal, 6, CII at 2.9 years

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<<Also,

she gets physical therapy at the preschool as well which she would

not get at the oral school. But we do still take her to private

physical therapy so we would just continue that as well. >>

Neal still received OT and APE locally through our district even though he was

placed at the oral school. He just left school early one day a week and we came

back here to meet individually with those therapists. So you don't necessarily

have to give up other services just because you are asking for placement in a

private setting.

Rhonda Savage

Mom to Audrey, 8, hearing; and Neal, 6, CII at 2.9 years

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<<Also,

she gets physical therapy at the preschool as well which she would

not get at the oral school. But we do still take her to private

physical therapy so we would just continue that as well. >>

We do the same thing as stated before. Annika still recieves her PT services

from the district and then she attends the oral deaf school. We also take her

to a private PT. Right now, because of all the difficulty with the district and

not sure whether I want to just write them totally off I am pursuing a private

PT that would come into the oral deaf school and still bill my insurance. That

way we would not have to leave early from school either it will all be done

within the school setting. That way they can advise the oral school on things.

It has just been difficult for the two-private and home district-to work

together but that is just because the home district does not believe in what we

are doing. Also Annika attends preschool here in district one day a week and

then the oral school 4 days. This is mainly because we wanted Annika to learn

to work with kids that are typical in a limited basis and it also gives the PT a

chance to work with her in the preschool setting vs the home. Safety issues are

a big part of the plan in the preschool setting. The oral deaf school floors

are carpeted so if she would fall there is some padding where the district had

to remove the carpet from most of the floor so if Annika would fall or whatever

she has a higher risk of injury and it will be this way throughout school for

her so she needs to learn to watch what is safe and what is not.

Mom of 4

Marcus 15

13

Jon 11

annika 3.5

bilaterally implanted 3/1/04

hookup 3/25/05

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<<Also,

she gets physical therapy at the preschool as well which she would

not get at the oral school. But we do still take her to private

physical therapy so we would just continue that as well. >>

We do the same thing as stated before. Annika still recieves her PT services

from the district and then she attends the oral deaf school. We also take her

to a private PT. Right now, because of all the difficulty with the district and

not sure whether I want to just write them totally off I am pursuing a private

PT that would come into the oral deaf school and still bill my insurance. That

way we would not have to leave early from school either it will all be done

within the school setting. That way they can advise the oral school on things.

It has just been difficult for the two-private and home district-to work

together but that is just because the home district does not believe in what we

are doing. Also Annika attends preschool here in district one day a week and

then the oral school 4 days. This is mainly because we wanted Annika to learn

to work with kids that are typical in a limited basis and it also gives the PT a

chance to work with her in the preschool setting vs the home. Safety issues are

a big part of the plan in the preschool setting. The oral deaf school floors

are carpeted so if she would fall there is some padding where the district had

to remove the carpet from most of the floor so if Annika would fall or whatever

she has a higher risk of injury and it will be this way throughout school for

her so she needs to learn to watch what is safe and what is not.

Mom of 4

Marcus 15

13

Jon 11

annika 3.5

bilaterally implanted 3/1/04

hookup 3/25/05

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<<Also,

she gets physical therapy at the preschool as well which she would

not get at the oral school. But we do still take her to private

physical therapy so we would just continue that as well. >>

We do the same thing as stated before. Annika still recieves her PT services

from the district and then she attends the oral deaf school. We also take her

to a private PT. Right now, because of all the difficulty with the district and

not sure whether I want to just write them totally off I am pursuing a private

PT that would come into the oral deaf school and still bill my insurance. That

way we would not have to leave early from school either it will all be done

within the school setting. That way they can advise the oral school on things.

It has just been difficult for the two-private and home district-to work

together but that is just because the home district does not believe in what we

are doing. Also Annika attends preschool here in district one day a week and

then the oral school 4 days. This is mainly because we wanted Annika to learn

to work with kids that are typical in a limited basis and it also gives the PT a

chance to work with her in the preschool setting vs the home. Safety issues are

a big part of the plan in the preschool setting. The oral deaf school floors

are carpeted so if she would fall there is some padding where the district had

to remove the carpet from most of the floor so if Annika would fall or whatever

she has a higher risk of injury and it will be this way throughout school for

her so she needs to learn to watch what is safe and what is not.

Mom of 4

Marcus 15

13

Jon 11

annika 3.5

bilaterally implanted 3/1/04

hookup 3/25/05

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  • 3 weeks later...

In a message dated 10/16/2005 10:08:29 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,

rkoerber13@... writes:

The first thing is not to sign that you " agree " with the decisions made by

the committee. They have to re-meet with you and so forth as long as you

continue to NOT AGREE.

In fact, do not sign anything unless you read and understand every sentence

in it. My school district tried to tell us that signing the IEP meeting papers

was just an indication that the meeting had taken place. (!) We smelled a

skunk and refused, asking instead for a copy of the papers to take with us,

which they refused, since the " official " papers had not been typed up yet. The

only I put my name onto was the attendance sheet -- which proved that I was

there.

Best -- Jill

PS: I am working my way through a huge stack of emails so I'm sorry if I'm

answering posts out of order!

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  • 6 months later...
Guest guest

Hi,

I had an IEP meeting today....It had taken 2 years of

fighting for my child and well worth it.....They are going to

give him fast foward 2x a week...wilson reading program pull-out,

and the speech teacher will work with him with auditory closure...

the fm system remains....wow they can be something elce...I did not

sign...when it is drawn up I will review it and then sign...what a

day..

Has anyone had any experience with fast foward???I am courios

as to how it works...

thank you....

gina

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