Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Diagnosing a Problem Child

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Re parent's comment:

Now see my situation was quite the opposite. I knew

heart, body and soul

that my child had ADHD and the school was COMPLETELY

uncooperative. They refused

to accept it. They refused to do the testing that I

wanted. They refused to

give him a 504 plan. All I got was " he just needs a

spanking " or " he's just

lazy " and " there's no such thing as ADHD " .

 

 

Diagnosing a Problem Child

 

Diagnosing emotional, learning and behavior problems

is very difficult and requires spending time with the

child in a variety of everyday situations, the kind of

experience that typically only a parent would have.

That’s why school workers, who really don’t know the

child and do not themselves have experience with

learning disorders, often assume that the learning

problems are related to poor parenting or lack of

discipline. The behavior of the child could be due to

the distress of not keeping up with the class. If the

educators have the occasion to work with the child for

a year, they begin to understand that, perhaps, there

is some real physical learning disability or other

problem. By that time the child could be moving to a

new grade and new teacher. It often takes years to

pinpoint a problem.

 

The variety of intelligence and language processing

tests available to attempt to understand the problem

may not be covered by the parent’s insurance plan.

Further, some professionals may try to steer the

family towards counseling or medication, not

understanding that the child could have a real

physical disability and special needs.

Also, there are just not ways to diagnose or fully

understand many of these disabilities.

For example, autism can exist in a range of related

disabilities and degrees of difficulties. There is no

clear understanding of any of these

mental/visual/auditory/sensory-related problems.

 

Unfortunately, the plan to have the teacher support

special needs through special instruction is often not

practical. Such a plan is often unrealistic in a

large class or when the teacher has over a hundred

students in the course of a day. Such time-consuming

support may seem like ridiculous babying to a teacher

who has never “walked a mile in those shoes” and

thinks the child just needs punishment.

 

Special Education is often the only service which

provides an environment small enough and quiet enough

for the child to succeed. Unfortunately, there is a

stigma associated with Special Education and

sometimes-poor programs. Some Special Education

programs are excellent, but there is always the

problem of stigma. Where else can you find a class

size that allows the at-risk child to function? It’s

area l dilemma in the antiquated and rigid school

format.

 

If a child has a reading or listening glitch in their

mental make up, they could study a list of spelling

words for hours but still miss most of the words a

week after taking the test.

They could be an early reader but never enjoy reading

or read proficiently because their eyes literally do

not process some of the letters or they skip lines,

causing one to continually lose his place.

If the child does not process heard language, he may

block out the communications going on around him, the

ones everyone else is naturally tuning into and

learning from. It turns out the child has no idea what

month it is, his address, has a vocabulary of a small

child, and doesn’t know much of what the average

person absorbs through listening.

 

The above children could be above average in

intelligence and capability in other areas.

 

All of this complexity makes it very hard for

strangers to get involved in evaluating a person’s

child. One parent, whose child had diagnosed language

processing problems which were leading to a lot of

stress in school and related discipline problems was

told by a social worker, “Well, it took a lifetime for

him to become like this, so we are not going to

straighten out the situation overnight.” Other

parents have been blamed for their autistic child’s

anti-social behavior even though the parent points out

that the other children in the family are just fine.

 

Unfortunately, even if a parent is able to have his or

her child tested, there are not adequate tests to

diagnose the myriad of small glitches that can lead to

learning problems.

Frankly, we don’t understand what causes these

problems and have no real cures.

 

There is evidence that the movement of crawling is

essential to the development of certain learning

pathways. If you catch the child young enough, such

therapies often help.

If you have babies, encourage them to crawl around as

much as possible. Other research points to the damage

caused to small children by fixating the eyes on a

television screen.

Obviously parents are challenged in a city setting to

allow the kind of movements that seem to be essential

to brain development.

 

Other areas to examine have to do with nutrition and

allergies. Some parents try everything to help their

child with ADD. Unfortunately, families are working

against a culture which glamorizes prepared snacks

with corn syrup, monosodium glutamate, refined sugars,

hydrogenated fats. It is next to impossible to prevent

a child from eating such foods unless you want to lock

him in a large monkey cage (which has probably crossed

more than one parent’s mind) Some parents forbid their

children from eating candy only to have the child stop

by at a convenience store to stock up on candy before

coming home. Fortunately snacks have become somewhat

more health conscious, but there is still a huge

problem in this area with little school or societal

support for the child’s needs.

 

Some learning aids include providing books on tape for

a child who struggles to read, providing puzzles and

other building games such as tinker toys to develop

problem solving skills, enrollment in a variety of

sports activities.

 

Sometimes the only thing that works is to home school

the child and provide a personal study program based

on his particular needs. Learning supply stores

provide everything a parent needs, and most

communities have homeschooling support groups.

Unfortunately, the public school culture encourages

other students to scorn homeschoolers, and it is often

hard for a homeschooler to be accepted into a group of

public school children. For example, on a sports team

the homeschooler may be with a group of students who

all attend the same school and have formed a somewhat

insular social group.

 

Christians have built fairly large networks of

homeschooling groups, classes, and recreational

programs. Some counties have set up homeschooling

projects which connect to students through the

computer. These programs are not suitable for all

learning styles.

 

A parent with a learning disabled child will anguish

for years with the problem. Sometimes the family must

insist that its child be considered for special Ed in

order to get any kind of real support.

 

What we need is a society where neighbors show love

and affection to children, perhaps chatting with the

children and becoming mentors to the child in a small

ways. Just having caring neighbors who are supportive

rather than condemning can do a great deal to help a

family struggling with an at-risk child.

Unfortunately drugs such as Ritalin and Prozac, while

tried in desperation, do not work or only work

temporarily. They rapidly become more of a problem

than a cure, especially when the child comes down off

of the drug at the end of the day.

 

There are no easy solutions to these problems. I

personally believe that parents should receive small

stipends (not just families on welfare) for small

children so there is some money available to pay for

the kinds of supplementary activities and tutoring

children may need.

 

When a child is failing in school or socially, it can

be assured that the fact will be noticed by the family

and the school. Bi-annual psychological tests are not

necessary.

The solution is not to spy on and search for problems

in every member of society or to pretend that there is

a simple chemical solution for a myriad of problems

which could be contributing to the child’s lack of

success.

 

Life takes a lot of work, a lot of trial and error, a

lot of caring and time. Any mother who has changed

thousands of diapers and cut thousands of small finger

and toenails can attest to this reality. There are

really no short cuts or quick fixes.

Sometimes, after years of searching and struggle, the

family learns their child is dyslexic and will

probably never enjoy reading or be able to skim a

book. He may need special support to attend college or

vocational school which could include extra time to

complete a test or taping class lectures, getting

textbooks on cassette tape through Books for the

Blind.

 

Just when parents are ready to give up in despair, the

adult child invents a great business idea, falls into

a job just perfect for his needs, or meets a great

secretary and settles down into a normal life. Often

this happens once the child gets out of the public

school and is allowed to lead a normal life.

 

The amazing thing about people is they have a way of

taking care of their own needs if you let them, and

each person seems to have his own life plan.

 

We need to give parents all the support and respect

that we can and be humble enough to recognize that we

don’t have all the answers, either.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Diagnosing a Problem Child

 

Diagnosing emotional, learning and behavior problems

is very difficult and requires spending time with the

child in a variety of everyday situations, the kind of

experience that typically only a parent would have.

That’s why school workers, who really don’t know the

child and do not themselves have experience with

learning disorders, often assume that the learning

problems are related to poor parenting or lack of

discipline. The behavior of the child could be due to

the distress of not keeping up with the class. If the

educators have the occasion to work with the child for

a year, they begin to understand that, perhaps, there

is some real physical learning disability or other

problem. By that time the child could be moving to a

new grade and new teacher. It often takes years to

pinpoint a problem.

 

The variety of intelligence and language processing

tests available to attempt to understand the problem

may not be covered by the parent’s insurance plan.

Further, some professionals may try to steer the

family towards counseling or medication, not

understanding that the child could have a real

physical disability and special needs.

Also, there are just not ways to diagnose or fully

understand many of these disabilities.

For example, autism can exist in a range of related

disabilities and degrees of difficulties. There is no

clear understanding of any of these

mental/visual/auditory/sensory-related problems.

 

Unfortunately, the plan to have the teacher support

special needs through special instruction is often not

practical. Such a plan is often unrealistic in a

large class or when the teacher has over a hundred

students in the course of a day. Such time-consuming

support may seem like ridiculous babying to a teacher

who has never “walked a mile in those shoes” and

thinks the child just needs punishment.

 

Special Education is often the only service which

provides an environment small enough and quiet enough

for the child to succeed. Unfortunately, there is a

stigma associated with Special Education and

sometimes-poor programs. Some Special Education

programs are excellent, but there is always the

problem of stigma. Where else can you find a class

size that allows the at-risk child to function? It’s a

dilemma in the antiquated and rigid school format.

 

If a child has a reading or listening glitch in their

mental make up, they could study a list of spelling

words for hours but still miss most of the words a

week after taking the test.

They could be an early reader but never enjoy reading

or read proficiently because their eyes literally do

not process some of the letters or they skip lines,

causing one to continually lose his place.

If the child does not process heard language, he may

block out the communications going on around him, the

ones everyone else is naturally tuning into and

learning from. It turns out the child has no idea what

month it is, his address, has a vocabulary of a small

child, and doesn’t know much of what the average

person absorbs through listening.

 

The above children could be above average in

intelligence and capability in other areas.

 

All of this complexity makes it very hard for

strangers to get involved in evaluating a person’s

child. One parent, whose child had diagnosed language

processing problems which were leading to a lot of

stress in school and related discipline problems was

told by a social worker, “Well, it took a lifetime for

him to become like this, so we are not going to

straighten out the situation overnight.” Other

parents have been blamed for their autistic child’s

anti-social behavior even though the parent points out

that the other children in the family are just fine.

 

Unfortunately, even if a parent is able to have his or

her child tested, there are not adequate tests to

diagnose the myriad of small glitches that can lead to

learning problems.

Frankly, we don’t understand what causes these

problems and have no real cures.

 

There is evidence that the movement of crawling is

essential to the development of certain learning

pathways. If you catch the child young enough, such

therapies often help.

If you have babies, encourage them to crawl around as

much as possible. Other research points to the damage

caused to small children by fixating the eyes on a

television screen.

Obviously parents are challenged in a city setting to

allow the kind of movements that seem to be essential

to brain development.

 

Other areas to examine have to do with nutrition and

allergies. Some parents try everything to help their

child with ADD. Unfortunately, families are working

against a culture which glamorizes prepared snacks

with corn syrup, monosodium glutamate, refined sugars,

hydrogenated fats. It is next to impossible to prevent

a child from eating such foods unless you want to lock

him in a large monkey cage (which has probably crossed

more than one parent’s mind) Some parents forbid their

children from eating candy only to have the child stop

by at a convenience store to stock up on candy before

coming home. Fortunately snacks have become somewhat

more health conscious, but there is still a huge

problem in this area with little school or societal

support for the child’s needs.

 

Some learning aids include providing books on tape for

a child who struggles to read, providing puzzles and

other building games such as tinker toys to develop

problem solving skills, enrollment in a variety of

sports activities.

 

Sometimes the only thing that works is to home school

the child and provide a personal study program based

on his particular needs. Learning supply stores

provide everything a parent needs, and most

communities have homeschooling support groups.

Unfortunately, the public school culture encourages

other students to scorn homeschoolers, and it is often

hard for a homeschooler to be accepted into a group of

public school children. For example, on a sports team

the homeschooler may be with a group of students who

all attend the same school and have formed a somewhat

insular social group.

 

Christians have built fairly large networks of

homeschooling groups, classes, and recreational

programs. Some counties have set up homeschooling

projects which connect to students through the

computer. These programs are not suitable for all

learning styles.

 

A parent with a learning disabled child will anguish

for years with the problem. Sometimes the family must

insist that its child be considered for Special Ed in

order to get any kind of real support.

 

What we need is a society where neighbors show love

and affection to children, perhaps chatting with the

children and becoming mentors to the child in a small

ways. Just having caring neighbors who are supportive

rather than condemning can do a great deal to help a

family struggling with an at-risk child.

Unfortunately drugs such as Ritalin and Prozac, while

tried in desperation, do not work or only work

temporarily. They rapidly become more of a problem

than a cure, especially when the child comes down off

of the drug at the end of the day.

 

There are no easy solutions to these problems. I

personally believe that parents should receive small

stipends (not just families on welfare) for small

children so there is some money available to pay for

the kinds of supplementary activities and tutoring

children may need.

 

When a child is failing in school or socially, it can

be assured that the fact will be noticed by the family

and the school. Bi-annual psychological tests are not

necessary.

The solution is not to spy on and search for problems

in every member of society or to pretend that there is

a simple chemical solution for a myriad of problems

which could be contributing to the child’s lack of

success.

 

Life takes a lot of work, a lot of trial and error, a

lot of caring and time. Any mother who has changed

thousands of diapers and cut thousands of small finger

and toenails can attest to this reality. There are

really no short cuts or quick fixes.

Sometimes, after years of searching and struggle, the

family learns their child is dyslexic and will

probably never enjoy reading or be able to skim a

book. He may need special support to attend college or

vocational school which could include extra time to

complete a test or taping class lectures, getting

textbooks on cassette tape through Books for the

Blind.

 

Just when parents are ready to give up in despair, the

adult child invents a great business idea, falls into

a job just perfect for his needs, or meets a great

secretary and settles down into a normal life. Often

this happens once the child gets out of the public

school and is allowed to lead a normal life.

 

The amazing thing about people is they have a way of

taking care of their own needs if you let them, and

each person seems to have his own life plan.

 

We need to give parents all the support and respect

that we can and be humble enough to recognize that we

don’t have all the answers, either.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mail - Find what you need with new enhanced search.

http://info.mail./mail_250

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...