auditory dyslexia

Gonz

molṑn labé
Staff member
I laughed my way thru dinner last night reading this article. It is so full of insightful paradigms that, with on ounce of sense (or a six-pack) could be easily remedied.

The single mother of two was pulling dawn-to-3-p.m. workdays at an investment management firm to spend more time with her children, who were coping with a recent move as well as their parents' tense separation.
:duh:

This was strange: Davis had not been disruptive at his previous Montessori school. Nevertheless, Crowe hired a child-development expert to evaluate her son, who told her that though Davis needed help expressing his frustration in words, he otherwise was a typically rowdy little boy.

Lemme see, oh, there it is....HE'S 3 you fucktards.

The nation's toddlers haven't become gum-snapping thugs. And preschool teachers say they aren't evicting instead of instructing. In fact, their jobs may be tougher than ever as the number of students enrolled in special-education programs has risen 30% over the past 10 years, the National Education Association says.
The same timeframe as the real estate bubble?

The toll can be great on parents and kids alike, Lerner says. "When you're essentially told you have a demon child, you feel like you've failed yourself and your kid."
:rofl4:

Clearly, parents and educators are grappling with often unprecedented hurdles in their mutual quest to socialize the nation's newest crop of toddlers.
:eek:

Parents and teachers agree it's crucial to distinguish between typical toddler behavior (the occasional bite or push) and extraordinary displays of anger, a distinction made with greatest precision at schools with mental-health experts waiting to help. "The reciprocal blame between parents and child care providers helps no one, least of all the children," says Kadija Johnston, a pioneering force in getting preschools to not give up on students who act out. "Being expelled at 4 just leaves you with a rejected sense of self."


Oh good, government mental health experts. When they're done, they can return to thier job at FEMA. BTW, being expelled at 4 hurts nobody, save the parents.

As director of the University of California-San Francisco's Infant-Parent Program, Johnston has spent two decades sending mental-health experts to about 40 Bay Area schools with the goal of keeping problem kids in class. She says the Yale study "just confirmed what we know, and we hope the masses are now duly concerned."
Be afraid. Be very very afraid.

PAY ATTENTION!!!!
Kyle was diagnosed with sensory integration dysfunction, "which meant he had trouble filtering out distractions," DeNigris says.
You're three year old now has a dysfunction. It used to be called HE'S THREE YOU FUCKTARD!!!!!

But opting out of a preschool isn't always an easy choice, especially in large cities where preschools often have waiting lists.
Oh hell no. MUST HAVE BEEMER. MUST HAVE BEEMER

The two are doing fine in local public schools after being evaluated through Child Find, a federally funded early-intervention program.
Be afraid. Be very very afraid.

she was frustrated that the center "only seemed to be able to deal with the traditional child."
Be afraid.

At the second preschool, Katelyn's anger flashed again. But this time Artibee was referred to KEEP (Keeping Early Education Positive), part of the Michigan Childhood Expulsion Prevention Program.

Fuck afraid, run now, while you still can.

The program sent a specialist to observe Katelyn at school. Soon she was diagnosed with an auditory dyslexia that makes it difficult for her to follow directions in sequence. Now on a regimen of drugs, Katelyn successfully is navigating first grade.
You mean she's a... :gasp: a KID?!?!?!?!

But some school administrators say parents shouldn't be left to shoulder all the responsibility when it comes to helping preschoolers find their scholastic legs.

Where's my gun?

USA Today Amuse yourself at the helplessness & idiocy of todays parents. God help us all.
 

MrBishop

Well-Known Member
There's kids being kids and sometimes there's kids being not-kidlike. It usually means trouble at home such as abuse. My kid's school had one. Bit every day...sometimes 3-4 times per day. Pulled hair, kicked teachers, broke things. Zero respect for authority. In comparison to the rest of the kids his age...he was far beyond 'normal'. He's not in the school anymore. We may never know why this kid was acting up to that extent.

Daycare operators and staff can try and deal with it as best they can, with the help of the parents...but sometimes..

well, sometimes kids need more help than is available.
 

MrBishop

Well-Known Member
SouthernN'Proud said:
And sometimes they need real parents, dedicated to the job of parenting.
No kidding. Shame they don't require a license before people are allowed to have kids. Mind you, after having worked with kids at the QACLD (Que. Assn. of Children w/ learning dissabilities) for a bit while I was in school... there are an awful lot of seriously dedicated and loving parents out there with kids needing additional help. Nobody can be an expert in everything.

If I hadn't been taught how to deal with variations on dyslexia, I'd have been lost. A lot of parents just see their kid acting up or being a bit slow reading, writing or speaking and figure it's normal...s/he'll grow out of it. Ditto for teachers. Sometimes they do...sometimes they don't.



*I taught math and reading FYI. :) 4-7yr olds.
 

MrBishop

Well-Known Member
Which reminds me...there's a class-action lawsuit that's been approved recently.

Not for money though...they're trying to force the Quebec education department and 9 schoolboards, to offer early diagnosis and services to children with dyslexia..which is what the schools are supposed to be doing as per their mandate.

Strange that you have to fight to get your kids educated properly, eh?
 

Gonz

molṑn labé
Staff member
Wanna stop 99% of all this? End pre-school now. Require parents to parent. Put down the Maxxim & pick up your child. Have one parent stay at home & parent, full-time.

Not every person is destined to outgrow their "disabilities". We need ditch diggers too. If your kid can't cut it, learn to deal with it, they will. Hiring child-development experts shows that we have too much time & money.
 

MrBishop

Well-Known Member
Gonz said:
Wanna stop 99% of all this? End pre-school now. Require parents to parent. Put down the Maxxim & pick up your child. Have one parent stay at home & parent, full-time.
Works for some, not for all. And what do you do with single parents?
 

Gonz

molṑn labé
Staff member
Outside of death, there should be no single parents. The activity that causes pregnancy is well known.
 

MrBishop

Well-Known Member
No sex before marriage+Illegal to divorce+women stay at home, raising kids=the perfect world?
 

MrBishop

Well-Known Member
Gonz said:
I did not say any of those things. Next.
Outside of death, there should be no single parents.
The activity that causes pregnancy is well known.
Have one parent stay at home & parent, full-time.



Maybe a stretch.

"Till death do you part" - Marriage and children within that context only and no excuse except for death for either parent to stop being a parent (no divorce).
The one parent stays as home, full-time will end up being the mother at least 80% of the time if not more.
 

Starya

New Member
Gonz said:
Outside of death, there should be no single parents. The activity that causes pregnancy is well known.
Why thank you. You are quite right. I will immediately contact my ex, the severly mentally ill man who currently holds the maturity-level of a 10 year old, and tell him to make room, we're moving in again.

Or maybe I'll just kill him. Then there is death. Is that ok?
 

Starya

New Member
The program sent a specialist to observe Katelyn at school. Soon she was diagnosed with an auditory dyslexia that makes it difficult for her to follow directions in sequence. Now on a regimen of drugs, Katelyn successfully is navigating first grade.
I'd like to know how the heck you treat auditive dyslexia with medication. There is a pill that helps you recognise sounds? :alienhuh:
 

Gonz

molṑn labé
Staff member
Starya said:
Why thank you. You are quite right. I will immediately contact my ex, the severly mentally ill man who currently holds the maturity-level of a 10 year old, and tell him to make room, we're moving in again.

Or maybe I'll just kill him. Then there is death. Is that ok?
You knew his faults when you created another life did you not?

Bish said:
Outside of death, there should be no single parents.
The activity that causes pregnancy is well known.
Have one parent stay at home & parent, full-time.

"Till death do you part" - Marriage and children within that context only and no excuse except for death for either parent to stop being a parent (no divorce).
The one parent stays as home, full-time will end up being the mother at least 80% of the time if not more.

Must I spell out everything?

People take a vow. If they'd put as much time into their prospective life partner as they do their hair color there'd be less divorce. If people put as much time into their prosepective life partner as they put into concerning themselves with an orgasm, there'd be fewer children needing to have their lives torn asunder by the morons that call themselves parents. There will be mistakes made. Far fewer than using todays throw-away model.

Since when does one stop being a parent because of divorce (save the vindictive partner using the kids as bait)? It is not the same as being involved full-time & can't be. Buy the house on the next block & live there. There are always solutions once the head is removed from the asnus & the child is put in proper persepctive (FIRST)

The parent that stays home is irrelevent. The first year should be the mother, 100%. After all, that is the way nature inteded it. After that, it doesn't matter. For that matter, why the hell is wrong with dad providing & mom care-taking? It works in (virtually) every other species& it worked for tens of thousands of years in ours.
 

Professur

Well-Known Member
I don't believe Dyslexia is an aural problem, but a comprehensive one. Similar to stuttering, if I recall. I know we have dyslexics as members here. Perhaps one of them would like to field this.
 
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