Chuck Jackson wrote:As for your son's treatment, you should be quoting the Americans with Disabilities Act line by line to your school district. It was written for people in your position. If you aren't, you should, if you are and they aren't complying, simply sue them. This is major discrimination. Plain and simple. Vox Populi and the Supreme Court have said so and the yokels who run your schools should be trussed up and have to memorize the entire Act.
I feel for your situation, but it should be well within your control with a good lawyer and a quick call to your local media. They eat this stuff up. GOOD LUCK!!!!!
Chuck
Chuck, I have quoted the ADA and everything else. And even though I don't have my law license right now, I work for a firm that specializes in labor law so we are all very well aware of all of this. This is the only reason I have been able to get this far with the administration, by being able to speak their language. You should have been there a couple of years ago when they weren't giving us proper access to the school for Cub Scout recruiting, and I went to the school board in my full Scout leader uniform with the rest of the leaders and the Scouts and quoted the Boy Scout Act and how they could get all their federal funding, yes, all of it, yanked by the Kansas City Civil Rights Office if they didn't comply with that law and let our Pack do recruiting at the school in the same way PTA, sports, etc., all get to do. The newspaper ate it up so much that they gave my son a full page spread in their feature section that they usually profile leading businessmen of the community. Finally, Missouri has a MAP test (Missouri Assessment Program), and that is the test that is scored for funding that I referred to above. It is tied into the "No Child Left Behind" act, and yes, all you say is true about funding based on attendance, but in this state funding also tied to performance on that particular battery of exams that takes a whole week out of every school year to administer. So thank you for your kind remarks, we are all on top of it.
Todd, thanks. It's good to know we're all in there together.
Here is the kicker with Asperger's: all of the problems normally associated with some manifestations of autism, including the fixations and social interaction issues, are usually accompanied with incredible intellectual ability. A few years ago when he was tested for his accelerated classes at school, because of his Asperger's, he wouldn't even finish parts of the test, as he told the testing staff they were boring, and chose to crawl under the table and play with toys instead and wouldn't come out. Even at that, the total results of his accelerated testing could not be accurately scored not because he didn't finish them, but because the test couldn't measure as high as his performance was. The best they could say was that his IQ was above 180. Now, in the real world you and I know that number and $1 might get you a coffee refill nearest convenience store, but it shows how that when he has a good day, it's really good, and when he has a bad day, the uninformed want to treat it as a discipline issue rather than a medical issue that affects how the chemical firings of the synapses gets cross-ways (oversimplified, but I'm already taking up way too much bandwidth).
The whole point of this rant is that every parent should be as educated and informed as possible about their child's situation, whether it be discipline, glasses, braces, psychological issues, autism, physical issues of all types, etc., and stay in constant dialog with the school district and the medical providers to do the best for their child. So when discipline is called for, the parent in conjunction with the "team" can administer it, and when accommodations are in order, the "team" can tailor what is necessary to help the child.
Even though my son does have a recognized condition, he knows very well he cannot use it as an excuse, and must still do his best in a behavioral context. It is something to be worked through and coping mechanisms put in place. So we have him in Scouts, and we require no less discipline and personal behavior standards where possible. He knows that since he does do well on school work, that many people will not understand how there can be other issues as well. The unfortunate kicker is that because the synapeses simply do not fire in order properly, even daily routines just simply don't get done without constant reminders. For example, even though we have had a small aquarium for years, and he walks right in front of it on the way to the kitchen every morning, he still has to be reminded to stop, turn on the light, and feed them, where you or I can develop personal routines and habits that we take for granted.
Anyway, enough ranting. It is regrettable that the particular Austrailian school district felt it necessary to post such a message, if indeed it is a real message, and it is even more regrettable that there are so many others who do need help that aren't getting it.
And now to close, another telephone message, this one a spoof, the Mental Health Hotline:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FFmH66KT4RY" target="_blank