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Old 10-17-2006, 09:37 AM #1
Milivica Milivica is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Madison, WI
Posts: 146
15 yr Member
Milivica Milivica is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Madison, WI
Posts: 146
15 yr Member
Default Calling an emergency IEP, already...*sigh*

Where do I begin...there are several issues going on, I'm just going to copy my last letter to school, after they wrote me letting me know Vince is behaving oddly/badly at school which began after they started a 'no hug' policy with him, and told me it was ok with him....

Well, Vincent hates the high five idea, and perseverated about it to me all night. It's not ok with him, when is rejected, he may not talk about it. But, as is evident from yesterday's behavior at school, this 'No Hug Policy' effects other areas of his studies and behavior at school (as well as home). This perseveration impeeds his learning. I would say this would apply to any child. And when we spoke I understood it to be more than a 'No Hug Policy', he's been banned from being comforted in every way familiar to him, that shows him others care. No resting his head on a lap to cry, not even crying on a shoulder on the bus, no pinkie handshake. So, now you are aware, it is not ok with him. And now you are aware, he is not getting what the change is about. He might even be able to recite 'your' words, but he does not get it.

I don't get it either, so I'm not surprised he doesn't. I've really tried, and I just don't get it. When he hugs me too long or strongly, I've worked with him to be gentle. Now, when he hugs me it's appropriate. Hugging and physical touch is something that goes on in the world. If he needs to learn to hug...how hard, how long, what the signs are that the other person is done, then why was the decision made to create a No Hug Policy rather than teach him?

<snip>

And for the last time, it's not that I need to WITNESS Ms. H. talking to Vince about no more physical contact between them. I need to be there so when he says things that show me he doesn't understand why he can no longer touch her or be touched by her, I can explain her perspective to him. Which is hard enough since I myself don't understand the benefit of a No Hug Policy versus teaching him to be appropriate at school where hugs DO take place, tears DO fall and comfort IS given all around him. It's a nonproductive solution, to force a child with autism of all things, to understand why he will no longer be comforted with a hug or putting his head on a shoulder while crying. But, because I think so much of Ms. H., I want to find a way to work within her comfort zone. I can come any time of any day, so it's a bunch of hooey that it'll take another 10 days for this conversation to take place.

How about school considering explaining to aides, before BANNING or making a NO HUG POLICY, that if a child doesn't let go quickly enough during a hug, you help them to do so appropriately so he can take that with him, throughout school, out of school, and into his life. You are saying "Vince, you're doing this wrong, so no more touching". Honest I'm at a loss to grasp this. It's going badly, so your solution is don't do it at all. No one, not one person I've consulted about this issue, understands this solution. Or why it wouldn't be a better solution to get the ADULT aide rather than the CHILD student, to understand a hug appropriately policy.

Really, I'm starting to feel insane, my child is autistic, why punish and restrict and make policies that teach him nothing, other than that he has failed, at even a hug. Am I only making sense to myself?

But there's a bigger issue. Why is he currently doing work so far below what he is able to? Why were there things he could do in past grades, he can no longer do? We can talk about all of this at the emergency IEP, requested 10/16/06.

Thank you,
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